After several years of what I thought was respectful care, and a joint effort to care for my children, I am sad to say we will not be returning. The pediatrician who saw my first born from the day he was born just informed a guardian ad litem appointed for my custody case that she "did not accept the diagnosis" for 2 of my 3 children because I utilized testing methods outside what she offered. Though I brought copies of the lab work to be incorporated into my children's records immediately after receiving the results, apparently it will not be recognized by the court now, either. Instead it will appear as though I am needlessly treating my children with a gluten-free diet that this same pediatrician also told the guardian was "largely nutrient deficient." The guardian is now under the impression that my children are needlessly malnourished through my own choices despite no nutrition panels or other such research. Not to mention that the "nutrient deficiencies" of a gluten-free diet have never been mentioned to me despite me asking multiple times to look into reasons for my children's small sizes. Overall, I cannot recommend a practice that doesn't thoroughly answer questions or address parental concerns to the satisfaction OF THE PARENT. Performing ONE test that produces a "close" result, then not following up despite known IgA deficiency is common with such a test and the condition you're attempting to diagnose is sloppy. When a parent then chooses to pursue additional testing in an attempt to get the most information about their child, refusing to acknowledge and accept that information as a part of their care team is just silly. It also would have been nice to know that they were going to just ignore the lab results before it came up during a custody battle. The office staff has always been very nice and I am sorry to leave, but knowing that lip service has been given to me all these years is really disconcerting. I need to trust your recommendations for my child as an individual and if you're still going to refuse to acknowledge lab results that can impact their health for the rest of their lives? I can't trust you as far as I can sling a piano.