David Katzenstein

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David Katzenstein (January 3, 1952 – January 25, 2021) was an American virologist and prominent AIDS researcher. He was professor emeritus of infectious diseases and global health at Stanford University.[1]

Katzenstein was born in Hartford, Connecticut. His father, Henry Katzenstein was a physicist, and his mother, Constance Allenberg Katzenstein, was a clinical psychologist. He attended the University of California, San Diego where he earned a BA in biology in 1973.[1] He was an intern in internal medicine at the University of New Mexico, working with the indigenous tribes found there.[2] He also received his MD from UCSD in 1977.[1]

Teaching

After completing his residency in San Diego in 1980,[2] he taught at the University of California, Davis, and until 1986 at the University of Minnesota.[1]

Research

He developed a relationship with the medical microbiology department at the University of Zimbabwe's medical school while he was at the University of California. As a result of this relationship he became "one of the first U.S.-based H.I.V. researchers to commit to working in this region of the world." Katzenstein worked as a senior research fellow at the Food and Drug Administration's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research from 1987 until 1989, where he worked under Anthony Fauci.[2] At that time he became a faculty member at Stanford University as a clinical assistant professor of infectious diseases. He became the associate medical director of the AIDS Clinical Trial Unit at Stanford, which conducted clinical trials and research on antiretroviral drugs which helped people with HIV live longer.[1]

Director of the Biomedical Research and Training Institute

He joined the Biomedical Research and Training Institute in Harare in 2016, after retiring from his position at Stanford[2] and became its director.[3] There he trained clinical researchers, and brought modern monitoring and diagnostic systems to community health centers. He also published research papers.[1]

Memberships

He served on the editorial board of Current HIV Research. He was a member of the American Society for Microbiology, the Infectious Disease Society of America, the Society for General Microbiology, the International AIDS Society, the American Federation for Clinical Research and the Southern Africa Treat Research Network.[2]

Personal life

Death

References

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