I couldn't disagree more. The creation of the CFS clinics at Stanford is one of the most significant milestones in the history of CFS. You can't overstate the imprimatur of legitimacy that Stanford gives. If anyone thinks CFS is a BS disease, you can throw Stanford in their face. If there is another CFS clinic in a major U.S. teaching hospital- like the Mayo, Cleveland, the Brigham- let me know.
Dr. Montoya has conducted research, published, raised money, gotten other docs interested in CFS (like Kogelnik), gotten Stanford docs to collaborate in research, gotten other specialists at Stanford to treat pwc's.
And he believed us.
He is also an employee at Stanford. I have no idea how much support he gets for the clinic, or how many hours he can spend there. I do know that he has had to fight for everything he has gotten at Stanford. He shouldn't have to fight here.
JAH
I understand the limitations and frustrations of Stanford very well, and don't necessarily recommend it myself! I'm nut questioning anyone's negative experiences.
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I do agree that Stanford Medical having a CFS Clinic gives MECFS professional recognition. I agree that the researchers at Stanford Medical (not the CFS patient clinic) are making important discoveries.
However, the running of the Stanford CFS Clinic is far different from Stanford's MECFS research activities, where important strides are being made. I stand by my statement that the Stanford CFS is not at all as it would seem to be, with such great research happening nearby on the same campus.
IMO, the CFS clinic is a sham. Here you have extremely ill patients, and only one experienced physician. Moreover, that single experienced physician sees patients once per year.
This is not Quality of Care. This is not appropriate medically -- it violates the aspect of managed care called continuity of care. It means patients are not being cared for adequately.
The other physician in the clinic is inexperienced, with only few months of study in this illness. Many writers in this forum know far more than this physician about the illness.
You say Dr. Montoya is an employee of Stanford. Yes, he is, but his focus now is research and his sabbaticals, as he himself has directly stated. His focus is not treating patients.
You say you understand the limitations of the Stanford CFS Clinic. I hope those limitations are a bit more apparent now.