| Dr. Mark Schiller |
|
Dr. Schiller is an Assistant Clinical Professor at UCSF, a position that he has held since finishing his research fellowship at that university in 1995. He came to San Francisco following completion of his residency at Yale University and medical school at the University of Chicago. He is the author of a number of scientific and general medical papers and divides his time between clinical practice and research into rEEG. In addition, he is President of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, a national physician association dedicated to maintaining a strong patient-physician relationship through the free practice of private medicine. Dr. Schiller was increasingly frustrated by what he saw as the subjective nature of psychiatric treatment. Psychiatric diagnosis is based upon a classification scheme developed by the American Psychiatric Association. Although this was a step to make psychiatric diagnosis more objective, the fact remains that psychiatric diagnoses are determined by a committee which lists the symptoms and behaviors that they believe make up a disorder. Unlike other areas of medicine, there is no demonstrable, physical pathology available to validate these diagnoses. Most psychiatric symptoms are also shared among a number of different diagnoses so that diagnosis is often just a matter of opinion. Even when the diagnosis is clear according to the current diagnostic scheme, the process of medication treatment is still a very trial and error process. Through a fortunate chance, Dr. Schiller met the founders of rEEG. He was immediately intrigued by the possibility of finally having an objective, physiologic basis for psychiatric treatment. Convinced that rEEG had the promise to fundamentally improve the nature of psychiatric treatment, he began to work with the founders on developing and pursuing further research into rEEG. |
August 1st, 2012
Written by Loren HealPhysicians reacted with shock and anger to the Supreme Court’s decision to uphold the President Obama’s health care law, according to poll data and the leaders of activist groups, which are continuing to fight the law in court and via political action. According to Kathryn Serkes, cofounder of the Doctor Patient Medical Association, a recent nationwide poll sponsored by her organization found 83 percent of U.S. physicians have considered leaving their practices due to President Obama’s law. “This not just something that started today, and it’s not something that just started with passage” of Obama’s law, said Serkes. “There have been developments in medicine that have made it very, very difficult and have put some seriously different pressures on doctors. But this bill has certainly brought things to a head.” |
Stand with The Doctor Patient Medical Association to protect the doctor-patient relationship and improve the overall healthcare environment for you and your family.
Join DPMA TODAY and support an organization that supports YOU by taking your message directly to patients and the public. We are the only group on the ground educating patients about the threats and challenges you face to practice your profession.

Doctors first hand accounts of how the system actually interferes with their ability to give great, personal care to their patients...
More...

Health Savings Account (HSA):
A tax-advantaged savings account to pay for medical expenses. The account is usually linked to a high deductible health plan.

CCHF is a free-market resource for designing the future of health care.