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LeBauer Healthcare turns 75 later this
year and might well not be here but for the popularity of silk
hosiery. What is now one of the largest multispecialty practices in
the Southeast had a modest beginning. In the 1920s, businessman Joe
LeBauer moved his silk hosiery operation from New Jersey to
Greensboro. His sons, Sidney LeBauer, MD, an internist and
cardiologist, and Maurice LeBauer, MD, a general surgeon, started
practicing medicine on the third floor of the old Jefferson Pilot
building in downtown Greensboro in 1931. In time, nylons would replace
silk hosiery, and the family's interest would shift from textiles to
medicine. Sidney LeBauer had three sons who joined the practice, Joe
LeBauer, MD, a cardiologist; Sam LeBauer, MD, a gastroenterologist; and
Eugene LeBauer, MD, a pulmonary and allergy medicine specialist. A
fourth son, Sidney Jr., died of heart disease two days before he was to
graduate from Duke University School of Medicine. By the time the
three joined their father and uncle in the 1960s and 1970s, things were
getting busy and 80 to 100 hour weeks were commonplace. "Our father instilled in us a love of medicine, and we recognized the satisfaction he got from his practice," Sam LeBauer says. "There has never been a day I didn't enjoy practicing medicine."
Sidney LeBauer died in 1989. Maurice LeBauer died in 1998. Over time,
LeBauer HealthCare has grown into a large multi-specialty organization.
The goal, the LeBauers say, has always been to offer the best possible
medical care to the community. As the patient base grew, the practice
added new physicians to help carry out its mission. This growth led to
the development of four divisions - cardiology, gastroenterology,
pulmonary and primary care. In 1988, the practice moved to the Sidney
F. LeBauer Medical Center on N. Elam Avenue. Today, there are eight
branch offices throughout Guilford and Rockingham counties. The
cardiology division is on N. Church Street. LeBauer HealthCare also has
been a leader in clinical research in cardiology, gastroenterology and
pulmonology, with many members of the cardiology research team, led by
Bruce Brodie, MD, developing national and even international
reputations. "We have been very fortunate to attract a diverse group of highly trained and motivated physicians over the years," Joe LeBauer says. "We
are proud to have played a significant role in the development of
medicine throughout Guilford County. Our physicians are also proud that
they have been able to work closely with many other fine physicians in
the area."
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