Orla Tinsley


Orla Tinsley is an award winning journalist, campaigner and multimedia artist from County Kildare in Ireland.

Work

Orla Tinsley began writing for The Irish Times on the state of cystic fibrosis care in Ireland in 2005 when she was 18. Her work launched a decade long campaign to improve healthcare services and awareness of cystic fibrosis in Ireland. The campaign spanned several years and became a nationwide community effort sustained by Tinsley's articles in The Irish Times about lack of facilities, the deaths of her friends and the stories and energy of people with CF and their families and communities around Ireland.
When Orla Tinsley was 10 she returned to school after a prolonged hospitalization into a lesson on Seamus Heaney's poem Mid-Term Break. She has cited this poem as having a profound effect on helping her understand death in a way that could not be communicated otherwise. She began writing poetry. Two years later she won the Holy Family Secondary School Junior Poetry Cup and joined Kildare Youth Theatre.
In September 2008 for her work she was named Rehab Young Person of the Year In April 2009 she appeared on Late Late Show after writing several pieces in The Irish Times holding government to account on broken promises to build an adult cystic fibrosis unit in Dublin.
In 2009 she began an internship in The Irish Times. That same year the promised government funding for the cystic fibrosis unit was pulled and the campaign reprised. Several campaigners from the previous had died. Ms Tinsley and other new campaigners featured on RTE Liveline Show which played an important role in the campaign. Tinsley was named Irish Tatler Magazine's Woman of the Year in 2009. In 2010 she was awarded the Young Medical Journalist of the Year award.

Producer and Writer

In April 2011 Ms Tinsley presented, co-wrote and researched a special documentary for RTÉ's flagship current affairs programme Prime Time to apply pressure for building to begin at St Vincent's Hospital in Dublin.
In June 2011 an extract from Ms. Tinsley's book Salty Baby appeared on the Junior Cert exams.
In 2015 extracts form Ms. Tinsley's non-fiction book Salty Baby were included in an English Junior Cert curriculum book.
In September 2018 Ms. Tinsley co-produced a documentary about her transplant for RTE Television and in the following ten days over 9,000 people registered to be organ donors in Ireland. The organization that promotes organ donation awareness in Ireland said the response said "The public's interest in organ donation has dramatically spiked since cf campaigner Orla Tinsley's documentary was aired... such a level of public interest has not been seen for almost a decade" The Irish Broadcaster RTE coined the response "The Tinsley Effect" because of the strong and policy changing work Tinsley consistently creates.

Author

In September 2011 her best-selling memoir Salty Baby : A memoir was published by Hachette. The Sunday Times described the book as "gonzo journalism" It was shortlisted for Best Newcomer at the Bórd Gáis Irish Book Awards.
Siobhán Parkinson, the first Laureate na nÓg in Ireland, was inspired to write her book Miraculous Miranda after hearing Tinsley on the radio.

The Adult Cystic Fibrosis Unit Campaign

The idea of an Adult Cystic Fibrosis practice was conceived at St. Vincent's Hospital in the late 1970s by Professor MX Fitzgerald. CF was one of the first conditions to be treated by a multidisciplinary team comprising doctors, dietitians, physiotherapists, psychologists and nurse specialists but there was no adult treatment centre that had dedicated isolation rooms for people with cf. Huge improvements in life expectancy were achieved in this period but when advances in microbial genetics revealed how highly-resistant and life-threatening bacteria could spread through the CF patient population, it became clear that a dedicated space was vital to treat CF patients in isolation from one another. Ms Tinsley first wrote about the need for a dedicated CF centre in The Irish Times when she was 18 and the words she wrote and subsequent interviews and writing over the next decade drove awareness to a new level.
In July 2012, after campaign work over numerous years, a dedicated Cystic Fibrosis Unit opened. The ward block has an outpatient and inpatient facility for people with cystic fibrosis. It also has a floor of isolation rooms for people with cancer and another floor for those with infectious diseases who need isolation.
Similar units have opened in Cork University Hospital and University Hospital Limerick.

Transgender rights

In 2012 and 2013 Ms Tinsley focused on the rights of transgender people to attain gender recognition in Ireland. She was named Broadcaster / Journalist of the Year by the Gay and Lesbian Association in 2013.

New Cystic fibrosis Drug

In late 2012 she launched a campaign to get Kalydeco into Ireland after experts rejected making the drug available because it was too expensive. The drug is the first to treat the cause of cystic fibrosis and not just the symptoms.
In February 2013 the Minister for Health announced that the drug would be made available.
Since late 2013 Ms Tinsley is one of the first people in the world to be treated by the second new cystic fibrosis drug lumacaftor/ivacaftor which treats the most common mutation of CF. The drug has proven to improve lung function and health for people with CF.

Columbia University

In 2014 Ms Tinsley announced on the Irish talk-show Saturday Night with Miriam that she had been awarded a scholarship to Columbia University.
She now lives in New York City.

Double lung transplant

Tinsley received a double lung transplant in December 2017.
In November 2018 Ms. Tinsley was awarded the PR Institute of Ireland's highest honor for excellence in storytelling given only five other times in the institutes 60 year history. Other recipients include Peace Prize recipient John Hume, Special Olympics co-founder Mary Davis and Irish broadcaster Gay Byrne.

Awards and honours