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In a message dated 6/26/98 10:01:14 PM Central Daylight Time,
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<<

 Dear M. Dawn,

 I hear your frustration which at times must border on rage.  Your
expectations
 are more than reasonable but finding the right person to read all the "tea
 leaves" may well be the exact problem.  How about this for a plan....  since
 you are going to see your "internist" on Monday, let's designate her as the
 one who will help to pull it together for you.  Let's also figure that she
 can't do it since she (and all the others) haven't been able to do it so far.
 Sooo, appeal to her frustration. Ask her, right now, to offer her best ever
 analysis of what's going on - allow for a statement which says "this is quite
 complex" and "from the point of view of internal medicine..." but go for her
 simple and direct analysis.  (Incidently you can also do this with each of
the
 other people on the team.

 The wish will be for one of them to do the intuitive work on the spot.  So
 what happens if you get one or several wise and also intuitive opinions each
 with a reasonable plan of action, and the opinions differ?  This is where it
 gets interesting.  You can go back to each of them and with the same face-to-
 face directness ask for their new integrative analysis based on a very brief
 and direct summary of the other opinions.

 Option #2...do the above with the internist.  If she is stymied or whatever,
 appeal to her desire to get this pulled together.  Pause.  Introduce the idea
 of Mayo.  Pause.  Introduce her idea of having your case presented at Grand
 Rounds.  Let her decide the best discipline to host the integrative endeavor,
 and tell her casually that this will eventually make for a nice letter to the
 New England Journal of Medicine.  (With the Mayo Route, let them only do one
 evaluation with no more than two people involved.  Their task is to do the
 integrative work.  The "two people involved" brings a little money into their
 system so administration doesn't question anything, but the real challenge
 will be to find the right person to "chair and convene.")  Make sure you get
a
 report from them with major opinion and dissenting opinions and if possible
 obtain a videotape the conference afterwards.  Don't draw attention to that.

 I'll leave the rest up to you.  Please let me know if this is helpful and if
 it holds any promise for your further efforts.

 BTW after all this is done, sit down and do your own intuitive and
integrative
 analysis and come up with a plan of action that will help both you and your
 son.

 Tim

 ---

 Tim Hodgens, Ph.D.
 Westborough, MA >>


 Dear M. Dawn,

I can perhaps add to this an Excel 5.0 application with which one can show
some sequential things (real days) in ones life.  There are three variables
plotted against time.  I use cumulative L-dopa dose, function, and dyskinesia.
If you have AOL, I can attach a copy which, when downloaded, can be run as a
application

If you do not have AOL, send me your address and I will mail a 3.5" floppy
containing the application and a "how to" in MSWord 6.0.

Regards,
WHH 54/18