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For Immediate
Release
July 2, 2003 |
Contact
NASW Public Affairs
Office
Lahne Mattas-Curry
202-336-8228
lcurry@naswdc.org
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Richard Darling, DDS, Named NASW’s
2003 Public Citizen of the Year
Washington — The National Association of Social Workers
(NASW) is pleased to name Richard Darling, DDS, as the 2003 Public
Citizen of the Year for his work with organ transplant patients.
Dr. Darling is a dentist from southern California who contracted
an extremely aggressive form of Hepatitis C through a blood transfusion
following a car accident. He has personally survived a coma and
has undergone three liver transplants. Because of his own near
death experience, Dr. Darling founded, and is co-moderator of,
the Coachella Valley Hepatitis C Liver Disease and Transplant Support
Group, which provides support, promotes education, generates awareness,
and advocates for quality medical care for all people with liver
disease. Through his own experiences, he is able to teach other
patients how to find strength through their own spiritual awareness,
unselfishly providing transplant patients with strength and encouragement.
Dr. Darling is also a founder of ProrateNIH — a national
organization whose goal is the proration of research funding from
the National
Institutes of Health (NIH). If a disease kills large number of
Americans, proration dictates it shall receive the most research
monies. A disease that takes the lives of the second largest number
of Americans shall receive the second largest amount of NIH funding,
and so on. Only by proration can a fair and equitable distribution
of NIH research monies be achieved
As a member of the Board of Directors of the United Organ Transplant
Association, Dr. Darling speaks publicly to promote organ donation
and to clarify the facts and myths regarding the “Gift of
Life.” Each year, approximately 82,000 people in the United
States wait for organ transplants. Thousands in the U.S. will die
while waiting, compared to Spain, which has the highest donation
rate in the world. Living
liver donorscan give just part of their livers to a recipient,
and, in six to 12 weeks, the sections in both donor and recipient
will grow into whole livers Dr. Darling strives to educate the
public that, as organ donors, they can save eight lives and enhance
the lives of up to 50 others with tissue donation
Based on the belief that he has personally been blessed, Dr. Darling
feels a responsibility to give back to the community and to patients
waiting for lifesaving organ donations. He spends hours in the
Loma Linda University Medical Center Liver Transplant Intensive
Care Unit, where he lifts patient’s spirits, educates them
about what to expect in the operating room, and helps them focus
on the positive. Dr. Darling has made significant contributions
to the health and welfare of many who hope for the “Gift
of Life.”
The National Association of Social Workers (NASW), in Washington,
DC,
is the largest membership organization of professional social
workers with 150,000 members. It promotes, develops and protects
the practice of social work and social workers. NASW also seeks
to enhance the well being of individuals, families and communities
through advocacy.
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