Sorry to hear this, I think he helped some people. I know of one person in the UK whose ME illness he helped diagnose and document as an expert witness for a legal case, I believe (but this was over 20 years ago).
I agree he was something of a maverick and no doubt overly dogmatic in his claims of their being only 'one true ME' and regarding CFS as a non-diagnosis, while simultaneously referencing studies of 'CFS' patients to prove his aetiological basis of ME.
Some of the charges about record keeping and admin malpractice look a bit flimsy.
b) Dr. Hyde states that he practices “complex disease management” primarily involving
Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, which is outside the conventionally-
recognized scope of general or primary care practice;
Ha! In the UK at least, I'm sure we've heard the bean counters in charge of NHS budget claim this (ME/CFS) is a condition that GP's should be equipped to deal with and no specialist referrals are necessary.
c) Dr. Hyde takes diagnostic approaches that are not supported or corroborated by
conventional practice, and orders investigations the results of which are nonspecific and yield no
discernible constructive findings;
Well yes... welcome to the world of ME/CFS, this isn't baking a cake. But I think this charge is a matter of opinion. Some GP's can have an opinion boarding on nihilism about the value of non-routine diagnostic investigations; but for the patient with ME whose tests have hitherto been continually reported as normal, a discrete finding of some relevant pathology, finding a clue, can be meaningful and help restore their sanity that while what they're dealing with is obscure it is tangible, real, and not imaginary.
e) Dr. Hyde lacked knowledge of opioid or benzodiazepine treatment contracts, despite
prescribing long-term benzodiazepines to patients;
Fair enough, caution is warranted here, I'm not in favour of long term benzos either, but still sounds like something of a technical infringement.
Perhaps time for him to retire, but sorry to see him hounded out, as that's what it appears to be on first impressions, though I could be wrong. There seems to be an increasing intolerance for heterodox thought, and overall I'm not sure if that's a good thing for us as a community and society, or not.