This year’s DLH Inspire Awards were presented by OneLegacy Foundation’s Donate Life Hollywood, and were celebrated at the Taglyan Complex in Los Angeles. This star studded benefit included: Academy award nominee Eric Roberts (Runaway Train, The Dark Knight, Star 80), television star Stepfanie Kramer (Hunter, NCIS and 9-11), and classic TV icon Donny Most (Happy Days, Glee, Bold and the Beautiful).
The honorees at the event included a mix of television medical dramas and documentaries including top rated and highly praised shows like Grey’s Anatomy, Chicago Med, and The Resident. Good Morning America’s Robin Roberts was selected to receive the first annual Joe Lafferty Award for her work on the TLC series, Last Chance Transplant.
The award is named for Joseph Lafferty who passed away earlier this year. He was a two-time transplant recipient, author, and national organ donation advocate who helped reboot the Donate Life Hollywood project in 2018. Each year the award will honor an individual who works in the entertainment industry and helps to promote organ, eye, and tissue donation.
DLH Founder, Tenaya Wallace says each year the award will honor an individual who works in the entertainment industry and helps to promote organ, eye, and tissue donation. “The entertainment industry has a huge impact on the public’s perception of organ donation, and we are thrilled to honor these exceptional storylines for their dedication to getting the story right,” said Wallace. “Unlike most other subjects that are dramatized in Hollywood, the majority of the public has never actually experienced donation and thus are highly influenced, positively or negatively, by the fictional account of a very real and serious topic. When Hollywood gets it wrong, it can cost lives. But when they get it right—as these productions have—Hollywood has the power to literally save and change lives.”
All of this year’s recipients were chosen for their positive portrayals and authentic storytelling involving organ donation and transplantation.
Read on to find out more about the honorees and their work being acknowledged:
■ Daniel Sinclair, a co-executive producer on “Chicago Med” will receive an Inspire Award for his writing of the episode of “When You’re a Hammer, Everything’s a Nail.” This episode features a DCD donation, which is the first time we have seen this in a storyline. It also showed the efforts a hospital makes to identify a next of kin when there is a John Doe and clearly highlights the vast separation between the transplant unit and the emergency department.
■ Joy Blake is being honored for the writing of the episode “The Long and Winding Road” for the television program “The Resident.” DLH considers this to be the best episode ever written about organ donation. It is heartfelt while also accurately explaining the donation process, including brain death testing. Also honored is Dr. Daniela Lamas, writer/producer and physician, who works with The Resident to assure the medical accuracy of storylines.
■ Emmy award-winning screenwriter Mark Driscoll, a co-executive producer on “Grey’s Anatomy” will receive an Inspire Award for his writing of the episode “Legacy.” This powerful episode highlighted the person behind the organ donation and created a beautiful tribute to the donor.
■ Creator and Executive Producers Shannon Powers and Dan Snook are being honored for “Last Chance Transplant,” a docuseries following the journey of people waiting for organ transplants at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee.
■ Documentarian Colleen Wood is being honored for “JOE 238.” Ten years in the making, “JOE 238” documents the death of 24-year-old Sacramento police officer Joseph “Joe” Chairez, who wished to donate his organs upon death, and follows the lives of his loved ones in their unique grieving process as a donor family.
■ Dual-transplant recipient Valen Keefer will receive an Inspire Award for the docuseries, “Letters of Hope.” Created by Keefer and sponsored by Thermo Fisher Scientific, the docuseries aims to educate other transplant recipients and society at large about the realities of life before, during, and after transplantation.
Learn more about about the wonderful work OneLegacy does on their official website.
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