Stephen Straus
This anti-science scientist began his career as an investigator at NIAID in 1979.
• He died of an astrocytoma—a brain tumor—in May 2007. He was sixty.
• He trained in infectious diseases and initially made HSV-2, a herpes infection, his primary interest at NIH. His focus veered from HSV-2 when he got interested in "cfs,” momentarily suspected in 1983 of being caused by another herpes virus, Epstein-Barr.
• He was also the Chief of the NIAID Laboratory of Clinical Investigation. Under that program, people with challenging maladies are hospitalized at NIH and given experimental drugs in attempts to cure them.
• He was a co-author of the Center for Disease Control’s first definition in 1988, proposing the name “chronic fatigue syndrome” for the disease as well recommending that the definition exclude anyone with biological abnormalities. He also tried to keep the definition from being published in a medical journal, fearing it would fall into use as a clinical rather than a research definition; his fears were realized.
• Straus was the government scientific advisor to the Food and Drug Administration in the early 1990s when FDA officials conferred over the question of whether Ampligen should be approved for use in “cfs.” FDA has yet to formally approve Ampligen, although the agency allows very rich patients to buy the drug (at a cost of approximately $20,000 per year).
• In 1994, when asked who was providing the American military with its expertise on “cfs,” General Ronald Blanck, the military’s highest-ranking spokesman on Gulf War syndrome, responded, “Steve Straus, of course.”
There may never have been a more paranoid scientist in the government’s employ. Though he was accorded the status of national “expert” in the disease, Straus stayed away from every medical conference devoted to “cfs” throughout his entire career out of a stated fear of being attacked, verbally and even physically, by patients. Paul Cheney, who once said Straus practiced science at the "engineering level,” predicted that one day people would “dance on the graves” of Straus and his ilk—the flat-earthers.
So far, no dancing. (more…)


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