Press and Awards

Press

ABC News: “Study sheds light on chronic fatigue syndrome”

A new study by a team of researchers from Stanford University sheds light on chronic fatigue syndrome, which is estimated to affect over 836,000 Americans and has no known cure or cause, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Chronic fatigue syndrome (sometimes referred to in medical literature as myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, or ME/CFS) is a debilitating illness characterized by overwhelming fatigue that is not improved by rest, according to the CDC. Continue Reading


The Guardian: “Is chronic fatigue syndrome finally being taken seriously?”

José Montoya was a trainee doctor when his supervisor told him that if he continued specialising in treating chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), he would end up homeless. “About 15 years ago, I started working with 10 patients who’d had their lives devastated by this illness,” says Montoya, now a professor at Stanford University and one of the world’s leading experts on the disease. Continue Reading 


Nature: “A reboot for chronic fatigue syndrome research”

Name a remedy, and chances are that Elizabeth Allen has tried it: acupuncture, antibiotics, antivirals, Chinese herbs, cognitive behavioural therapy and at least two dozen more. She hates dabbling in so many treatments, but does so because she longs for the healthy days of her past. The 34-year-old lawyer was a competitive swimmer at an Ivy-league university when she first fell ill with chronic fatigue syndrome, 14 years ago. Continue Reading


Palo Alto Weekly: “Unraveling the mystery of chronic fatigue syndrome”

Researchers are making headway toward finding evidence of chronic fatigue syndrome and how it may change the brain. Ronald W. Davis, a Stanford University genetics researcher who was instrumental in the Human Genome Project, is heading up a new research center at Stanford University, which is rapidly becoming a nexus for chronic fatigue research. Continue Reading


Stanford Medicine: “Immune System Disruption the Search for Answers”

Erin keeps a photo of herself playing soccer in the living room of her tidy cottage near San Francisco Bay. It captures her image frozen in time and space, hurtling like a comet between two opponents, her white-blond ponytail fanned out like flames. Continue Reading 


Stanford Medicine: “Researchers identify biomarkers associated with chronic fatigue syndrome severity”

Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have linked chronic fatigue syndrome to variations in 17 immune-system signaling proteins, or cytokines, whose concentrations in the blood correlate with the disease’s severity. Continue Reading

Awards

  • Outstanding Intern Award, Department of Medicine, Tulane University School of Medicine (1988)
  • Outstanding Senior Resident Award, Department of Medicine, Tulane University School of Medicine (1990)
  • The Department of Medicine Outstanding Teaching Award, Tulane University School of Medicine (1990)
  • The Owl Club Award for Outstanding Clinical Teaching, Tulane University School of Medicine (1990)
  • The Franklin G. Ebaugh, Jr. Award for Advising Medical Students, Stanford University School of Medicine (1995)
  • The Henry J. Kaiser Award for Excellence in Clinical Teaching, Stanford University School of Medicine (1995)
  • The Arthur L. Bloomfield Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Clinical Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine (1997)
  • The David A. Rytand Teaching Award for Excellence in Clinical Teaching, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine (1998)
  • The Kenneth Vosti Teaching Award for Excellence in Teaching, Division of Infectious Diseases and Geographic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine (2000)
  • The David A. Rytand Teaching Award for Excellence in Clinical Teaching., Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine (2001)
  • The Kenneth Vosti Teaching Award for Excellence in Teaching, Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine (2002)
  • Chief Residents Teaching Award for exemplary teaching at Stanford Resident's report, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine (2003)
  • Fellow of the American College of Physicians (FACP), American College of Physicians (2011)
  • Fellow of the Infectious Diseases Society of America (FIDSA), Infectious Diseases Society of America (2011)
  • The Arthur L. Bloomfield Award for Excellence in the Teaching of Clinical Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine (2011)
  • Selected as one of the 100 Colombians who have exceled abroad, 2013 Edition., 100 Colombianos en el exterior (2013)