The Mercury News

Dr. Joyce Wallace, pioneering physician on treatment of AIDS, dies at age 79

- By Katharine Q. Seelye

NEW YORK >> Dr. Joyce Wallace, a Manhattan internist who treated prostitute­s for AIDS, occasional­ly brought streetwalk­ers home with her when they had nowhere else to go.

Once, when her son, Ari Kahn, was about 12, Wallace, who had to get to the hospital to see her patients, left him at home with a prostitute who was HIVpositiv­e and going through heroin withdrawal. It wasn’t clear who was to take care of whom. Ari ended up making pizza for them both. When Wallace returned, she took the prostitute to a drug treatment center; the woman eventually overcame her addiction and got a job at a research foundation that Wallace had started.

“On one hand, it was grossly irresponsi­ble,” Kahn said of the incident in an interview. On the other hand, he said, it was typical of his mother’s extraordin­ary capacity for empathy.

Wallace died Oct. 14 at a hospital in Manhattan. She was 79.

Kahn said the cause was a heart attack.

Wallace was not a convention­al mother. Nor was she a convention­al doctor. Among the first to report the lethal disease that became known as AIDS, she tried to stop its spread among thousands of New York City prostitute­s.

The underbelly of the city was her clinic. She drove around in a white Dodge van offering tests for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, and distributi­ng condoms, as well as running a needleexch­ange program and trying to coax prostitute­s off the streets and into shelters.

“They are our responsibi­lity,” she told The New Yorker in 1993. “These are not throwaway women.”

Wallace started practicing medicine in the late 1970s in Greenwich Village, where many of her patients were gay men. In the spring of 1981, before AIDS was recognized, she was among a handful of doctors in New York and San Francisco who reported finding Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rare and often rapidly fatal form of cancer, among their patients.

On July 3, 1981, she was among the researcher­s who published one of the first reports that linked Kaposi’s sarcoma with immunodefi­cient gay men. The disease would become a telltale sign of HIV.

Wallace was especially interested in how AIDS affected women. Once a test was developed, she started offering prostitute­s $20 or a McDonald’s coupon to allow her to draw their blood.

Her studies found high correlatio­ns between HIV and intravenou­s drug use. She planned to start a dropin center on the Lower East Side to provide streetwalk­ers with a hot shower, clean clothes, food and, if they were drug-free, transition­al housing.

“I want to offer the girls a place where they can start to remake their lives,” she told The New York Times in 1991 as she renovated a former brothel for that purpose.

Local residents rose up in anger and blocked that proposal, just as other residents would block her similar proposals in the West Village and in Washington Heights — even as Wallace received awards for her work and grants to keep her projects going. In June 1994, Mirabella magazine named Wallace one of its “100 Fearless Women” for her determinat­ion to help prostitute­s, despite the neighbors’ objections.

Prevented from setting up these homes, Wallace was left to work out of a mobile van, from which she offered a range of social services. Her goal, she told the Times in 1992, was not to stop transactio­ns between streetwalk­ers and their clients but to make them safer.

To that end, she also star ted the Treatment Readiness Program, an alternativ­e sentencing project at Manhattan Criminal Court in which prostitute­s were given condoms and literature on AIDS prevention and drug treatment instead of being sent to jail.

Joyce Irene Malakoff was born Nov. 25, 1940, in Philadelph­ia but grew up in Queens, New York. Her father, Samuel Malakoff, was a teacher at a vocational high school. Her mother, Henrietta Yetta (Hameroff) Malakoff, was a speech therapist.

Joyce was 12 in 1954 when one of her younger brothers, Lee, who was 8, fell ill with leukemia and died the next year. That trauma helped motivate her to become a doctor.

She graduated from Queens College in 1961 with a degree in history, then studied premed at Columbia University’s School of General Studies. She earned her medical degree at the State University of New York Health Science Center in Brooklyn, known as Downstate, in 1968.

A brief first marriage in the 1950s ended in annulment. Her marriage in 1964 to Lance Wallace, a researcher, ended in divorce in 1973. She married Arthur Kahn, a stockbroke­r, in 1979; they separated in 1983 and later divorced.

In addition to her son and daughter, Wallace is survived by four grandchild­ren.

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