Wiley has been criticized for promoting her version of BHRT without proper qualifications or scientific evidence. On October 11, 2006, Erika Schwartz,
Diana Schwarzbein, and five other
MDs who have worked with BHRT during their careers issued a public letter to Suzanne Somers and her publisher,
Crown, criticizing Somers' endorsement of Wiley's protocol. In the letter they alleged that the Wiley Protocol is "scientifically unproven and dangerous" and that Wiley has no medical or clinical qualifications; other criticisms of the protocol itself have stated that the levels of hormone are dangerously high. Wiley has claimed on her website and in speaking engagements that she earned a B.A. in anthropology from
Webster University in 1975. On November 27, 2006,
Newsweek reported that Webster has no record of this degree. Wiley's bio page was then changed to "Pending B.A. in Anthropology, Webster University, 1975" and then again to "Attended the B.A. Program in Anthropology, Webster University, 1970-1975".
ABC News reported on February 16, 2007, that, according to Webster, she received only a blank diploma. ==Senate testimony==