So I should try sending it to a professor rather than a doctor who is obviously against me and my better state of being.

I'm not discouraged.
It is good that you are not discouraged because that is not my intention.
Among the many things that I have experienced in my life, I have worked with many doctors and have managed a Medical Centre,
so I understand from experience how hectic a doctor's life could be.
Paper work, reading and replying to reports and regulatory compliance requirements are what occupies a doctor's working day between seeing patients.
A suggestion, if you can get your hands on medical journals, scientific magazines, peer reviews, any medical or scientific report which support your condition to provide for a non-drug remedial course of action (if that is what you want) or another drug/herbal remedy, the doctor is likely to consider it.
You can then present the information to your doctor; doctors rarely have time to research, they usually reference their drug and medical handbook/database.
The doctor is required to first listen to his/her patient and then assess the patient within the scope of their training to decide on the appropriate diagnosis method and possible remedial actions. The trick is to keep a record of your adverse reactions to the drugs, and after presenting the information and relevant medical/scientific report, let the doctor determine (professional pride) to suggest the trial period and review date.
Schedule a day when the doctor is not so busy, preferably in the morning time when the doctor is at his/her peak level of concentration and patience, and try to be succinct as possible because doctors would rather see 3 patients than spend 45 minutes with one patient; this pays more.
Plan well, execute well and may you have success
