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My son had cystic fibrosis. About three years before he died, I began to study, very seriously, biochemistry, in an effort to save him. I made a call on a CF support group, for people who were interested in working with me. (My field is not science; we were all amateurs.) Several people answered the call. One was a political science professor from BYU.
On the day that my son died, I found an article that had information in it that I knew was the key to solving the mystery of the disease. I began to "shout it to the rooftops," and so did this BYU professor. I couldn't stop studying at that point; it was just something I had done for so long, I was on automatic pilot when my son died, and I continued. This prof from BYU took my work and published it without my permission and refused to give me credit for it. This was at a time when I had just lost my son and I was absolutely devastated.
I continued my study and I believe that I have found a systemic treatment for the disease. A lot of people followed my research and supported it, in many ways. The BYU professor clung to the first finding of my research, though, as if it was the answer to everything. She gave out some really bad advice to a couple of people, based on her misunderstanding of this research and ending up killing a young man. So, of course, the rest of us disassociated ourselves from her. She now has an internet group of her own, on which no one can post anything that disagrees with her understanding of the disease and her "treatment" for it. Anytime the subject of my research comes up, she attacks it vehemently, even though she knows very little, if anything, about it.
Of course, our group has just finished it's work, and the work has been published in a journal and on PubMed. We have a mailing list on the internet, for people to exchange research and to talk about it. Recently, since the work was published, we have had quite a few new people join our group, and they seem to be causing a lot of disruption. Strangely enough, some of their internet ID's were created on the very day that they joined our group. I don't like to censure the free exchange of ideas, but I am beginning to suspect that this woman is either some of these people herself, or has sent some of them, for the purpose of disruption.
What would you do, if you were in the same situation?
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