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  1. Joseph Adolph Sonnabend (6 January 1933 – 24 January 2021) was a South African physician, scientist and HIV/AIDS researcher, notable for pioneering community-based research, the propagation of safe sex to prevent infection, and an early multifactorial model of AIDS.

  2. 30. Jan. 2021 · Dr. Joseph Sonnabend in 2014. As both a physician and a researcher, he was one of the most important figures in the fight against AIDS, if also one of the most unheralded. Simon Watney. By...

  3. 11. Feb. 2021 · Photo credit: Simon Watney. Joseph Sonnabend was the world’s first AIDS doctor. He never made that claim, and perhaps it wasn’t quite literally true, but fate placed him in New York City immediately before the start of the epidemic, where his training as a researcher gave him tools that others lacked, and his compassion created a ...

    • Bob Roehr
    • 2021
  4. 3. Feb. 2021 · Joseph Sonnabend, Brilliant Early AIDS Doctor, Would Treat Patients for Free. Feb 3, 2021. Sonnabend in recent years. Simon Watney. When it comes to legendary HIV/AIDS doctors, there are the...

  5. 19. Apr. 2021 · Joseph Sonnabend, a physician, virologist, and multitalented individual, who participated in pioneering studies on virus replication and on the mechanism of action of interferon, died in London on January 24, 2021. He will, however, be best remembered for his activism and contributions to research during the early stages of the AIDS ...

    • Robert M. Friedman, Jan Vilcek
    • 2021
  6. Joseph Sonnabend, a pioneering figure in the early effort to confront the multiple dimensions of the AIDS epidemic in the United States, died January 24, 2021, at the age of 88. A lengthy and admiring obituary published in the New York Times said of him that he was “one of the most important figures in the fight against AIDS, if also one of ...

  7. Joseph Sonnabend was the world’s first AIDS doctor. He never made that claim, and perhaps it wasn’t quite literally true, but fate placed him in New York City immediately before the start of the epidemic, where his training as a researcher gave him tools that others lacked, and his compassion created a loyal patient following.