Michigan State to lead Lyme disease study - read more
Disappearing a disease: when guidelines are biased, patients suffer
By Pamela Weintraub on February 05, 2009 in Psychology Today - read more
You can skew the evidence in your treatment guidelines, but you can't stop the march of science. You can try to disappear a
disease --but in the face of a burgeoning epidemic with ever more people sick, can you ultimately succeed?
Psychology Today: www.psychologytoday.com/
Pamela Weintraub is the author of Cure Unknown: Inside the Lyme Epidemic and senior editor at Discover Magazine.
www.cureunknown.com
Experience Magazine: Click here to read Pam's story
Kare 11 story - http://www.kare11.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=818774&catid=2
Science Daily: Greater Understanding of Lyme Disease-Causing Bacteria -
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/06/090630163156.htm
David Volkman, Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics at Stony Brook, and previously Senior Investigator with the
National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, has submitted the attached letter to the IDSA pursuant to it's
document submission processes. Click here to read more
For more information please go to CLDA: Click here to go to CLDA
Tick, Tick, Tick . . . | Features | Mpls.St.Paul Magazine + mspmag.com
The number of Lyme disease cases in Minnesota rose 35 percent in 2007, and it's continuing to rise.
Click here to read the entire article: www.mspmag.com/features/features/tickticktick/107906_4.asp
More Ticks, More Misery July 200 - NYTimes article
Economic Impact of Lyme Disease - read more
Lyme Support Group takes over trail for one day
Pain, frustration, desire to spread education bring group members together
There were times that Anne Myre and Laura Hamer felt they must be going crazy.
Unexplainable, misdiagnosed aches, pains, fatigue, anxiety and depression
characterized several years of their lives before finally receiving the right diagnosis.
When it came, the diagnosis brought relief of finally knowing there was a name for
what they have, yet also brought the anxiety of not quite knowing how the disease
would continue to affect them, and how to cope with it in their daily lives.
BY DANI STRENKE
Click here to read more