Education
Brown graduated from Swarthmore College as a Phi Beta Kappa. He then attended Johns Hopkins Medical School.
Brown graduated from Swarthmore College as a Phi Beta Kappa. He then attended Johns Hopkins Medical School.
He used them to treat over ten thousand patients, often inducing remission in their disease. He did his medical residency also at Johns Hopkins. Subsequently, he did research at the Rockefeller Institute in New New York This research led Brown to conjecture a link between rheumatoid arthritis and cell wall deficient bacteria called mycoplasmas.
Exploring that link would inspire the rest of his medical career.
Work positions held by Brown after he left the Rockefeller Institute: Assistant Professor of Medicine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Director of Arthritis Research at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Washington, District of Columbia
Professor of Medicine at George Washington School of Medicine in Washington District of Columbia Department Chairman at the same university. Doctor at the Arthritis Institute of the National Hospital for Orthopedics and Rehabilitation.
Brown stopped teaching at George Washington University in 1970, in order to join the Arthritis Institute of the National Hospital for Orthopedics and Rehabilitation.
Thereafter he devoted himself full-time to both researching the cause of Rheumatoid Arthritis, and treating patients with the disease. During his lifetime, Brown published in medical journals approximately 100 papers about rheumatoid arthritis.
In 1988, one year before his death, he published, in collaboration with Henry Scammell, a book entitled In 1993, Mr. Scammell published a book entitled This second book expands on The Road Back (it includes a reprint of The Road Back).
Both books give many testimonials of people who believe they were saved by Brown"s treatment.
A video documentary featuring Brown explaining his treatment is available on the internet. Throughout his long career, Brown fought an uphill battle to get the beneficial effects of his antibiotic treatments recognized by the medical establishment. This uphill battle is documented in the popular media The Road Back Foundation (wwwroadbackorg) was founded to continue the work of Brown.
Since McPherson"s death several high quality clinical trials have demonstrated that long term use of several tetracyclines delivers some small improvement in many patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
These trials have recently been summarised by Stone at Toronto Western University.
Brown was also a member of the following institutions: American College of Rheumatology (of which he was one of the founding members), Arthritis Foundation (of which he was a Trustee).