Eva Andersson-Dubin


Eva Andersson-Dubin is a physician born in 1961. She is also the founder of the Dubin Breast Center at the Tisch Cancer Institute at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. She is married to hedge fund billionaire Glenn Dubin, and dated Jeffrey Epstein. She worked as a model and won the Miss Sweden contest in 1980.

Education and medical career

Born in Sweden, she earned a bachelor’s degree from Ostraboskolan where she graduated first in her class, concentrating in mathematics and physics. After college, Dr. Andersson-Dubin pursued a career in modeling and in 1980 was named Miss Sweden and placed fourth runner up in the Miss Universe contest. She attended the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm for three and a half years and then transferred to UCLA’s School of Medicine where she earned her MD in 1989. She then completed her residency in internal medicine at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York in 1990.
The Dubins donated approximately $19 million and were involved in raising an additional $24 million so that the center could open in 2011 and have funding to operate. Andersson-Dubin works at the Dubin Breast Center part of the Tisch Cancer Institute at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. Since opening in 2011 to 2018, the center has processed 180,000 patient visits.

Ford Modeling career

, who founded and ran Ford Models with his wife Eileen Ford, discovered Eva Andersson while she was walking down the street. Jerry Ford took Eva Andersson to meet Eileen Ford and Andersson became a Ford Model. In the 1970s, Eileen Ford the American model agency executive and co-founder of Ford Models described Eva Andersson-Dubin legs on her modeling card as: "excellent". Later, Eva Andersson won Miss Sweden 1980.

Personal life

Eva Andersson dated Jeffrey Epstein. Eva Andersson continued to "socialize with Epstein after his time in jail" for pleading guilty in 2008 to a state charge of procuring for prostitution a girl below age 18.
In the early 1990s, Eva Andersson was seen by her future husband Glenn Dubin for the first time via a modeling photo in the New York Post's Page Six section.