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  1. Linda Jane Laubenstein (May 21, 1947 – August 15, 1992) was an American physician and early HIV/AIDS researcher. She was among the first doctors in the United States to recognize the AIDS epidemic of the early 1980s; she co-authored the first article linking AIDS with Kaposi's sarcoma.

  2. This collection includes photographs, autobiographical essays, a diary, and other biographical material; letters to Laubenstein's parents after her death; and bylaws, correspondence, and other records of Multitasking Systems of New York.

  3. 17 de ago. de 1992 · Linda J. Laubenstein, a Manhattan physician who in 1981 discovered some of the first mysterious cases of what became the worldwide AIDS epidemic, died on Saturday at her summer home in Chatham,...

  4. 18 de ago. de 1992 · Dr. Linda Laubenstein, who in 1981 discovered some of the first mysterious cases of what became the worldwide AIDS epidemic, died Saturday at her summer home in Chatham, Mass. She was 45.She...

  5. 29 de nov. de 2021 · November 29, 2021. While Manhattan physician Linda Laubenstein ’69 was working in her private practice in the early 1980s, she began to see patients with purple spots on various parts of their bodies who would then fatally succumb to a mysterious shutdown of their immune system.

  6. 5 de feb. de 2018 · Illustration by Meg Gough-Brooks. Model Specimens is a monthly column that explores the role models who inspired today's scientists. This month, Gabriella Knowler discusses her admiration for Linda Laubenstein, a physician who fought hard for patients who were ignored by most.

  7. 19 de jun. de 2020 · NEARLY 40 YEARS AGO in New York City, Linda Laubenstein ’73, Res., Fel. ’78, began seeing patients, mostly young gay men, who had the rare skin cancer Kaposi’s sarcoma. By 1982, she had treated 62 patients with Kaposi’s sarcoma—nearly a fourth of the total recorded cases in the United States at that time.