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Grey's Anatomy's Ellen Pompeo Sounds Off About the Recent Plot Twist That She Was ‘Deeply Against'
Grey's Anatomy's Ellen Pompeo Sounds Off About the Recent Plot Twist That She Was ‘Deeply Against'

Yahoo

time29-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Grey's Anatomy's Ellen Pompeo Sounds Off About the Recent Plot Twist That She Was ‘Deeply Against'

Can't say that I blame Ellen Pompeo for being 'deeply against' the Grey's Anatomy storyline in which legendary rule-breaker Meredith followed protocol to the letter upon learning that Catherine's protegé Evynn had lied about wife Tasha's Alzheimer's in order to obtain a liver transplant for her. But, as the actress tells our sister site Variety, 'I don't always have a say in the choices the character makes. And writers will initially service a plot before they might stop to think, 'Would the Meredith Grey that [Ellen] built… make that choice?'' Case in point: the Season 21 two-parter in question. (Read the recaps here and here.) 'My problem with that storyline,' Pompeo explains, 'was the Meredith Grey that I've created would have always been like, 'I'm pissed that you lied, [but] let's figure out how to game the system together to get you this f—king liver. F—k the system. The system is broken.' More from TVLine NCIS: Origins' Mariel Molino Shares What Was Most Heartbreaking About Finale, Why She's 'Proud' of Final Shot Cedric the Entertainer Talks Nixed Neighborhood Spinoff, Offers Update on Tracy Morgan Offshoot Crutch Grey's Anatomy Preview: Monica Is There When Amelia Needs Her Most 'Instead, Meredith chooses, for some reason, to be mad and snitch and tell UNOS and tell the board that [Evynn] lied and that [Tasha] shouldn't get the liver — when Meredith has subverted the system for 20 years to do the right thing. She's done free surgeries, whatever it takes, to actually heal and help people.' According to Variety, the Grey's Anatomy OG 'was so livid that she had an emotional outburst.' Ultimately, guest star Lena Waithe, who played Evynn, adjusted Pompeo's POV, helping her see that the plot was serving Meredith's significant other, Nick. 'At the end of the day,' she says, 'Meg [Marinis], who's the showrunner, Debbie [Allen, the EP who plays Catherine] and Shonda [Rhimes, the series' creator] all recognize that all of my outspokenness about the creative on the show is all out of a place of caring deeply about the show. 'I see my job as trying to keep Shonda's legacy as good and solid as we can,' she continues, 'and the minute you stop caring or phoning it in or getting lazy, we're not really doing what we've been paid to do.' Grey's Anatomy's Most Memorable Moments View List Do you agree with Pompeo that Meredith ratting out Evynn and Tasha to UNOS was a very -Meredith thing for her to do? Best of TVLine Yellowjackets' Tawny Cypress Talks Episode 4's Tai/Van Reunion: 'We're All Worried About Taissa' Vampire Diaries Turns 10: How Real-Life Plot Twists Shaped Everything From the Love Triangle to the Final Death Vampire Diaries' Biggest Twists Revisited (and Explained)

Sick and Skipped Over: How We Investigated the Organ Transplant System
Sick and Skipped Over: How We Investigated the Organ Transplant System

New York Times

time27-02-2025

  • Health
  • New York Times

Sick and Skipped Over: How We Investigated the Organ Transplant System

I walked into the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia last June chasing down one story. I left with an idea for another. It was the weekend of the American Transplant Congress, an annual gathering of doctors and scientists, where the offerings included panels on 'novel antifungals in transplantation' and 'antibody-mediated rejection.' I was looking into a tip I'd received about organ transplant programs. But while there, I decided to check out a session on a different topic: kidney allocation, or the process of deciding who gets a transplant and who doesn't. I knew the organ transplant system in the United States maintained waiting lists to help ensure that organs were distributed to patients fairly, and that the sickest patients received priority for transplants. And I had heard that sometimes there were exceptions. But I was surprised when panelists discussed, rather matter-of-factly, the way those once-rare exceptions were becoming more common. The system, they said, was increasingly disregarding the rules and sending kidneys to patients who were nowhere near the top of the lists. So I shifted gears. Though we never lost interest in the original tip, my editor, Kirsten Danis, and I agreed that I should focus on this topic first. This week, my colleagues and I published an investigation into the growth in instances where patients in line for lifesaving transplants are being skipped over. Officials are routinely passing over patients when allocating kidneys, livers, hearts and lungs. We found that last year, officials bypassed patients on organ waiting lists in nearly 20 percent of transplants from deceased donors. Those organs often went to patients who were not as sick, or had not been waiting as long. Over months of reporting, we spoke with more than 275 people involved in the transplant system. At first, some were reluctant to talk. The panelists from the conference — two transplant surgeons and a researcher with the United Network for Organ Sharing, the nonprofit federal contractor that oversees the U.S. transplant system — wouldn't speak with me. Nor would many of the other people I had seen at the convention center in June. We decided to get hold of the data and conduct our own analysis. The Times paid $1,000 to UNOS for a database containing details on nearly a quarter-century's worth of donated organs, lists of possible recipients and offers made to patients (no names, however; the data was anonymized). It was enormous, and included 377 million rows of data. Thankfully, we were working with Mark Hansen, a data scientist at Columbia who leads the David and Helen Gurley Brown Institute for Media Innovation. For weeks, Mark painstakingly pored through the information. He consulted with medical researchers on how to navigate the database, wrote code to help comb through the rows and built checks in to make sure our analysis was accurate. While he was working through the data, I spoke with doctors around the country, asking them what they had seen in their dealings with organ procurement organizations, the nonprofits in each state that have government contracts to manage organ donation and distribution. These organizations are supposed to follow a strict allocation process, which can be time-consuming. By the fall, we knew which organizations were regularly ignoring waiting lists, and how they were doing it. By then we also had learned that the practice was bigger than kidneys. But we still didn't know why. Two of the nonprofits agreed to let me embed with them. I shadowed workers as they allocated organs, and spoke to dozens of employees at other procurement organizations. Leaders of the organizations said they ignored the lists only as a last resort, in order to place organs that were deteriorating and at risk of going to waste, and that so doing was allowed under federal regulations. But we found that the organizations sometimes ignored the lists as a way to reduce staffing costs, or to steer high-quality organs to selected hospitals. The organizations, we realized, were often prioritizing ease and expediency over the order of the names on the lists. We also found when patients were skipped over, organs disproportionately went to white patients, Asian patients, men and college graduates, amplifying existing disparities in the health care system. Over the past five years, we found, more than 1,200 people died after they had neared the top of a waiting list but were passed over. It is possible that those organs wouldn't have been a good fit medically, but patients didn't have the opportunity to find out. From the start, we felt strongly that this story needed to be told not just through words, but through visual depictions that could convey both the complexity and the human consequences of the transplant system. Jeremy White, an editor in The Times's Graphics department, meticulously created and used 3D-printed models to translate the data into visual representations of waiting lists and organ allocations. The photojournalist Alyssa Schukar helped introduce readers to Marcus Edsall-Parr, a teenager in Michigan who was passed over last year when he was first in line for a new kidney. (The person who got it was 3,558th.) Marcus's doctor was appalled, and told The Times about the incident. With the family's permission, he put us in touch. This month we sent a detailed summary of our findings to the federal Health Resources and Services Administration, which oversees UNOS. It has since ordered UNOS to address the practice of skipping patients. That convention, and our ensuing investigation, was another reminder that a vital part of reporting is being open to receiving unexpected information. Our team will continue to report on the transplant system — including digging into that original tip.

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