• Sexual Wellness Services

Call: (760) 323-2118
8am to 5pm Mon - Fri

Meet the Provider: Dr. David Hersh – L …

Dr. David Hersh, M.D., Chief Clinical Officer, joined Desert AIDS Project in early 2013 as a staff Psychiatrist and accepted the position of Chief Clinical Officer in January 2016 after serving as Director of Clinical Services for the prior two years.  He continues to manage a patient caseload in addition to his administrative duties.

As Chief Clinical Officer, Dr. Hersh oversees the development, delivery, and integration of all medical, behavioral health, home health, social, and dental services.  He also supervises Informatics & Compliance to include medical records and information technology. His primary duties consist of the development, implementation, and monitoring of policies and procedures, quality improvement, meeting goals of fiscal efficiency through billing and budget management, and leading initiatives to enhance collaboration and communication with internal and external stakeholders.

Dr. Hersh has been practicing medicine for 27 years, becoming a Diplomat of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology in 1992.  After graduation from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Dr. Hersh received his medical degree from the University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey – Rutgers Medical School, followed by post-doctoral work in psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut.

Dr. Hersh has been a professor of psychiatry at the University of Connecticut Health Center, and at University of California – San Francisco. Prior to his work at Desert AIDS Project, Dr. Hersh served as Medical Director of Substance-Use Treatment Services for the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

Desert AIDS Walk October 22 Ruth Hardy P …

The 30th Annual Desert AIDS Walk

PALM SPRINGS, CA (October 13, 2016) – In 1987, former First Lady Betty Ford, actor Kirk Douglas and his wife Ann lead the first steps of the Desert AIDS Walk. On October 22 over 2,000 community members will unite in Ruth Hardy Park to walk in the 30th Desert AIDS Walk in support Desert AIDS Project, presented by Desert Regional Medical Center.

Desert AIDS Project has grown from a small group of volunteers who founded D.A.P. in 1984 to one of the most comprehensive and respected AIDS service providers in the country. In the past 12 months, individuals seeking care at D.A.P has grown by an astounding 65%. 50 new patients walk thru the door every month.

This year’s walk events begin at 8 am on Saturday, October 22 in Ruth Hardy Park. DJ JC DiStefano will energize the park while walkers sign-in and explore the Health & Wellness Festival featuring over 40 vendor booths and a kids activity zone. The main stage will be emceed by 2016 Queen of the Desert, Tommi Rose and 2016 Queen of the Desert Fan Favorite Pinkie Meringue Shimmer.

Prior to stepping off on the walk, which follows a 2.5 mile route through downtown Palm Springs, walkers will enjoy live entertainment from headliner Pepper Mashay and local talent Marina MacDesert Winds Freedom Band will perform along Palm Canyon Drive as walkers pass by.

Congressman Raul Ruiz and Palm Springs Mayor Robert Moon lead the group of distinguished community leaders and D.A.P. partners making remarks prior to the walk stepping off at 9:30am. Joining them will be Desert AIDS Project CEO David Brinkman, D.A.P. Board Chair Steve Kaufer Carolyn Caldwell, CEO of Desert Regional Medical Center, presenting sponsor of the 2016 Desert AIDS Walk.

 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

8:00    DJ welcomes walkers with energizing music.
Breakfast courtesy of Koffi

Health & Wellness Festival opens

8:30     David Brinkman, CEO Desert AIDS Project

Steve Kaufer, D.A.P. Board Chair

8:35     Robert Moon, Mayor Palm Springs

8:40     Raul Ruiz, Congressman

Carolynn Caldwell, CEO Desert Regional Medical Center

8:45     Urban Yoga Warm-Up

Marina Mac Performs

9:00     Pepper Mashay Performs

9:30     Walkers Step Off

10:30   Walkers Return to Park | Health & Wellness Festival | Live Performances Continue

Gay Mens Chorus Performs

Marina Mac Performs

Pepper Mashay Performs


2016 Desert AIDS Walk Sponsors

Presented by Desert Regional Medical Center.

Major sponsors: Grace Helen Spearman Foundation, Gilead, Wells Fargo, Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians, Eisenhower Medical Center, City of Palm Springs, MDVIP, The Desert Sun, KMIR, Desert Oasis Healthcare.

Other Sponsors include: Revivals, Jus Chillin, Koffi, The Old Spaghetti Factory, Zin American Bistro, United Way of the Desert, VIP Mobile Suites, The Standard Magazine, Gay Desert Guide, and CV Independent

About Desert AIDS Project

Desert AIDS Project (D.A.P.) serves our community with primary and HIV-specialty services, including medical care, case management, and social services, including food, housing, and counseling. D.A.P. also provides HIV prevention education and free and confidential HIV testing at dozens of community test sites and events through its Get Tested Coachella Valley campaign. They also offer The DOCK, a sexual health clinic, whose services include STD testing and treatment; PEP & PrEP education and referral to treatment; free and confidential HIV testing; and well woman exams. With new advances in treatment, improved access to care through health reform and new prevention technology, including pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), D.A.P. is committed to bringing the HIV epidemic to an end.

About Pepper Mashay

Pepper MaShay exploded on the dance scene in the summer of 2000 with her mega smash hit “Dive in the Pool” (the un-official theme song from Showtime’s Queer As Folk & best described as the “It’s Raining Men” of the 21st Century).

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Meet the Provider: Anthony Velasco – S …

Please join us in welcoming Anthony Velasco to the Desert AIDS Project medical team. Mr. Velasco is an Adult-Gerontology Primary Care Nurse Practitioner and has been working in HIV care since 2010. Prior to joining the Desert AIDS Project, he worked as a clinical nurse supervisor at UC San Diego Health in an acute medicine unit specializing in HIV, tuberculosis, hepatitis, opportunistic infections, and AIDS-related cancers.

Mr. Velasco earned both his undergraduate and graduate degrees from San Diego State University, graduating top of his class. He is trained in two advanced practice nursing roles – Nurse Practitioner and Clinical Nurse Specialist. In addition to being a board-certified Nurse Practitioner through the American Nurses Credentialing Center, Mr. Velasco was also awarded board certification in medical-surgical nursing and AIDS care nursing. In 2014, he was honored with the Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses Career Mobility award. He belongs to the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners, Association of Nurses in AIDS Care, and Sigma Theta Tau Honor Society of Nursing.

In each of his academic and professional endeavors, he derives the greatest joy from building relationships with his clients, and from collaborating with all members of the transdisciplinary team to offer caring, comprehensive, and compassionate care.

Mr. Velasco is passionate about global health and HIV/AIDS care and has participated in medical missions to Honduras and Haiti. He recently relocated to Palm Springs, September 2016, with his 20-lb cat, Mochi. Although he misses surfing and paddle boarding, he is very eager to explore the gorgeous hiking trails of the Coachella Valley. He is very excited to be a part of the Desert AIDS Project.

*As a part of our new EPIC E.H.R., patients of D.A.P. can click on the Patient Portal button at the top of the website to be taken to My Chart, an interactive tool for online advice from a provider, as well as access to health information and test results, the ability to make appointments, to request prescription refills, and more. Visit the FAQ page to learn more about My Chart. You can even download the My Chart app for iPhone or Android.

New, more convenient hours at The DOCK!

Staying in control of your sexual health just got a whole lot easier!

The DOCK, a sexual health clinic staffed by and situated at Desert AIDS Project in Palm Springs, has announced a new, more convenient schedule beginning Tuesday, September 6th, the day after Labor Day.

Our new, more convenient schedule hours will make it easier for people to access the care they need – when they need it.

The new hours will be Monday-Friday from 10:00AM to 6:30PM for all services. The new schedule will make it easier for people to access services after work, or even during their lunch break. As an added convenience, patients can walk in, with no appointment necessary.

The DOCK New Hours

“When our patients ask, we listen,” said David Morris, MD, Medical Director of The DOCK. “For sexual health treatment and prevention services, accessibility and convenience aren’t trivial – they’re key to better health outcomes.”

The DOCK provides STD testing and treatment, free and confidential HIV and Hepatitis C testing, and Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) and Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP) to prevent the acquisition of HIV.

As the clinic has become better known and more popular, an increasing number of patients and community members have asked the clinic to stay open all day (with no lunch break) and to extend hours into the early evening.

The DOCK is located at 1695 N. Sunrise Way, Palm Springs. Its unique, trademark entryway is via the loading dock ramp on the south side of the Desert AIDS Project building.

For more information, please visit www.thedockclinic.org.

Supporting the transgender community

When it comes to helping transgender individuals on a day-to-day basis … whether that means finding a job or accessing culturally-competent medical and psychological care … it’s all about putting aside the stereotypes and embracing people for who they are.

That was clearly the main message to the crowd of about 60 who gathered for Trans Pride 2016 at the Tolerance and Education Center in Rancho Mirage on June 28. The event was sponsored by D.A.P., using a portion of a grant from Riverside University Health System.

The message was reinforced – with a call to self-empowerment – thrown in by keynote speaker Aydian Dowling, the 27-year-old trans bodybuilder, activist, and vlogger who’s recently appeared on TV’s “Ellen” and has a popular YouTube channel called “ALionsFears.” Though Dowling didn’t win a competition to land the cover of Men’s Health magazine – a 2015 campaign backed by thousands – he was eventually featured on a special edition cover with other men. Little wonder that a recent Gay Times magazine cover featured a photo of his tattooed torso with the headline “What a man! The incredible journey of Aydian Dowling.”

D.A.P. Clinical Psychologist Dr. Parker discussed updates in medical and mental health treatment for the transgender community. Emerging best practice models promise to be less stigmatizing and more inclusive of input from the transgender community. Because transgender health care is an evolving practice, Dr. Parker recently attended a four-day education initiative by WPATH—the World Professional Association for Transgender Health—in Atlanta to sharpen his skill at treating transgender clients.

“Over the last five years there have been major changes in mental health approaches for transgender clients,” Dr. Parker says. “Access to services has grown, in part because of the Affordable Care Act. Clinicians and organizations can get new information and models for best practices that previously were hard to acquire if you didn’t live in a major center for transgender health.”

Examples of the new information includes Injustice at Every Turn, an exhaustive survey of 6,450 subjects documenting “in horrific detail” the discrimination that often befalls transgender people and its effect on their mental health. Significantly, the distress that comes from feeling the gender assigned at birth is wrong for you is now called “gender dysphoria” instead of “gender identity disorder.”

Dr. Parker says he believes those who changed the definition in the manual of mental disorders, DSM-V, listened to the transgender community. The goal was to stop labeling the condition a sickness, while maintaining a diagnosis that allows insurance to cover hormone, surgical and other care that might be needed.

Beyond health care, D.A.P.’s Career Building Coordinator Valerio Iovino – who helps D.A.P. clients find jobs, return to school, or gain valuable volunteer or internship experience – spoke to the crowd about innovations in support for the transgender community. For him, offering support is simple: fight the stigma that the world attaches to transgender job applicants and focus instead on their skills and knowledge.

“We don’t worry about the way people look,” Valerio told the applauding audience. “We focus on what they can do.”

Photo by Luis Alberto Gavela

Women’s Empowerment Day invites sharin …

The female clients of Desert AIDS Project will be front and center, as they receive manicures, massages, and sisterly love during the second annual Women’s Empowerment Day on May 21 … and it’s going to be all about health and wellness for women living with HIV and AIDS.

They’ll learn more about their unique health and emotional issues from leading specialists. A favorite from last year’s event, Dr. Laveeza Bhatti, MD, PhD., Director of the Hep C/HIV Co-Infection Clinic at AIDS Healthcare Foundation in Los Angeles, is returning with more good advice. Dr. Bhatti is an infectious disease specialist, who has worked with female HIV-affected patients for years. Dr. Bhatti will be joined by Jill Gover, PhD., director of Mental Health Services at The LGBT Community Center of the Desert. As a clinical psychologist, Dr. Gover specializes in addiction, anxiety, depression, aging, and LGBT issues.

“The Women’s Empowerment Day is important because we want our female clients to know we’re here to support their needs, just as we do their male counterparts,” says Brett Klein, Events and Retail Marketing Manager, who, along with Denise Marvel, Human Resources Coordinator, is organizing the day. Brett noted he and Denise want to introduce women to the many workshops, support groups, and alternative therapies offered at D.A.P.

Janine Bell, Substance Abuse Specialist who leads our Women’s Empowerment Group, explains that reaching women, who comprise about 5% of D.A.P.’s client base, is difficult because they’re not as “out” about their HIV-positive status as gay men. Many of them are low-income single mothers who don’t hang out around D.A.P.’s campus and mingle. “After completing their medical, dental or case management appointments, they bolt,” Janine observes.

That’s why Brett feels it’s important for D.A.P. to extend a special invitation to women to let them know that D.A.P. is here for them, too.

“We learned at our first empowerment day that women experience the disease and its medications differently than men,” Brett says. “And there are very few outlets for them to learn about HIV the way they know it and share that knowledge with others who are going through the same thing.”

Last year, Dr. Bhatti explained HIV from a woman’s perspective and fielded questions that were both illuminating and touching. There were tears and reassurance among the audience of about 18 women, who shared their experiences. Dr. Bhatti applauded the size of the crowd saying it was unusually large for an event held by an AIDS service organization for women.

The second annual Women’s Empowerment Day will be held from 9:30 AM to 4 PM. on May 21 at D.A.P.’s main campus. The “safe space” day will include a session on building confidence and coping skills, a back-to-work career building seminar, breakfast, lunch, manicures, and massages.  Childcare services are available on request.

If you’d like to attend, please RSVP on or before May 11 by calling 760.992.0419.

Revivals Palm Desert soon to be “El Pa …

“Location, location, location” might be a realtor’s cliché but it still drives every retailer’s decisions about where to place their new store.

Location – to the third power — has driven Revivals Palm Desert to move from its location just off I-10, at 72-750 Dinah Shore Drive near Costco, and relocate seven miles south down Monterey Avenue to 72-885 Highway 111 near El Paseo. Still in Palm Desert, the new store will have the Westfield mall across the street and the posh El Paseo shopping district behind it. This popular corner at 111 and Monterey is awash in traffic that promises to drive Revivals sales skyward, according to Dane Koch, our Director of Retail.

“The move is all about location,” Dane says. “The store near Costco was so hard to find because we had no visibility from Dinah Shore.” With such heavy reliance on Costco shoppers, to sustain our business, the location offered little ability to grow. Expanding is essential for Revivals to continue its important contribution to D.A.P.’s diversified revenue stream to provide patient and client services.

“The new location on 111 offers great visibility. We believe we’ll retain our current shoppers while gaining new ones,” Dane smiled. “Being located in a strip mall with other successful retailers will greatly increase our traffic and sales. I believe we’ll see a corresponding improvement in the store’s profit. And every one of our 55 volunteers and six paid staff are committed to help us do that in support of D.A.P.’s mission.”

While he declined to elaborate, Dane hinted that this new location will have a closer affiliation with D.A.P.’s 100 Women annual giving program. Watch for details in future issues of DOSE

Foot and vehicle traffic abound at the new location in the shopping center that’s anchored by Staples office supply center and Rite Aid pharmacy. At 15,000 square feet, the new store will be a bit smaller while still retaining the mod-meets-vintage flavor of Revivals, which sells new Mode furniture, along with gently used clothing, housewares, appliances and more.

While a formal Grand Opening date is still pending, the new location will have a “soft opening” on Saturday, May 28, offering a $25 coupon on every purchase of $50 or more. The coupons will be good for the entire month of June. The old location will remain open until very close to that date.

 

D.A.P.’s nutritionist prescribes good …

The health care world, including Desert AIDS Project, looks at nutrition as a key part of good health. That’s why Gustavo Wong, registered dietitian and certified exercise physiologist, joined us about eight months ago as yet another facet of D.A.P.’s holistic approach to the care of our patients and clients.

Food is medicine for all of us, particularly for those living with HIV. “As a way of eating to live a healthier life, I recommend less processed food while choosing more natural items from a specific array of food groups,” Wong says. “Those groups are vegetables, fruits, and whole grains as good sources of carbohydrates, along with protein from meats and healthy fats.”

FoodPlate1As a primary guideline to healthier eating, Wong recommends the “plate method.” The basic idea is to have half of the plate devoted to non-starchy vegetables with a quarter for proteins and a quarter for carbs. However, Wong does tailor recommendations to the needs of individual clients. For example, some foods aggravate gastro-intestinal systems of certain patients, announcing their presence in the form of diarrhea, constipation, or nausea.

“Fats generally are the culprits,” Wong says, “so I want to make sure clients don’t have GI problems. If they do, I adjust their diet accordingly.”

The non-starchy veggies on half the plate include salads, asparagus, beets, mushrooms, broccoli, cucumber, and spinach. Denser carbs that make up a smaller part of the plate include beans, lentils, peas, winter squashes, sweet potatoes, bread, pasta, and corn. Red meat, chicken, eggs, fish, nuts and nut butters round out the plate with protein. On colder days, some people prefer to have vegetable soup, as a way of incorporating those all-important vegetables into their diet.

For breakfast, Wong recommends such items as cereal with nuts and fiber, such as flaxseed meal, or by adding some bran. Regardless of which meal, we all still need the foundation of “macronutrients” – carbs, protein, grains, and healthy fats – to help build a strong immune system. And taking a lot of supplements is no substitute for a balanced diet.

Neither is processed food. Wong insists that the nutrients that have often been removed, limited, or destroyed in food processing are essential for all of us.

Click to watch the tasty video 

HIV and its care pose special challenges …

There are some dental health issues pressing on those living with HIV and AIDS that we should illuminate in February, when National Dental Health Month is marked.

Our dentists, Dr. Ryan Yamashiro and Dr. Daniel Jo, both graduates of Loma Linda University School of Dentistry, agree that some of these concerns weigh more heavily on many of our patients than they do on those who are not HIV-positive. The doctors describe those special challenges and what they do to help.

How important is good dental hygiene for those with HIV?

Dr. Jo: In general, it’s really important for any patient to have good oral hygiene. But yes, some of the medications our patients take can create complications of the mouth.  If you don’t have good dental hygiene you can experience more problems such as gum disease and cavities than a person who isn’t HIV positive might face.

What are some of the oral challenges faced by people living with HIV?

Dr. Yamashiro: Some of the patients have candidiasis, (a fungal yeast infection also known as thrush.)  They take a lot of medications so decay can be accelerated with them. Many also suffer from dry mouth due to some of the medications they’re taking and that also can cause decay. They also have problems with dry mouth in general. They just don’t really salivate that much and it can cause a lot of problems. We try to help manage all of that with them.

How much of that do you see here at D.A.P.?

Dr. Jo: It’s a pretty common problem. It can affect their condition in terms of their HIV.  That goes back to oral hygiene. In general, it’s important to have a healthy oral environment by maintaining the teeth they have, avoiding gum disease, and trying to keep them as healthy as possible.

What do you do about dry mouth that’s a function of HIV, or the amount, or type of medications the patient is taking?

Dr. Yamashiro: Sometimes there’s not a lot you can do. We can prescribe Salagen, (which stimulates salivation), to patients. For some it works, for some it does not work. There’s also salivation replacement therapies they can buy at the store: ACT mouth wash and Biotene spray to name a couple. But they’re all quick fixes that don’t last all day. So, for a lot of patients, it’s difficult to take care of the problem 100%. Sometimes they have to work with physicians to get off those meds or change them. But for some that’s just not possible. They have to suffer with the dry mouth that leads to plaque build-up and tooth decay. It’s frustrating to them because they brush and floss and still get decay.  A lot of times it’s emotionally draining, because they say ‘why should I try when I still keep having this problem?’

Are there any changes in the dental clinic that we ought to know about?

Dr. Jo: Now that we’re a full Federally Qualified Health Center, it’s good for our patients and our workflow as well. The biggest change is we’re growing: They brought me in as the second full-time provider; we have another part-time hygienist; we have more assistance at the front desk. It’s good. We’re starting to scale up so we can provide more services to more patients. In terms of that, I think we’re on the right path.

Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards Gala

Thanks for joining us at this year’s Gala!


Check out our online auction
View photos from our TapSnap booth
2016 Steve Chase Gala Program

Since 1995, the Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards Gala has raised millions of dollars for direct client services at Desert AIDS Project.

Thanks to our 2016 Sponsors

Pinnacle

wellsfargo

Producing
Eisenhower Medical Center
Harold Matzner
Walgreens

Award/Major

Annette Bloch
Desert Regional Medical Center
Harbinger Pictures
Helene Galen
Integrated Wealth Management
One America
Steve Tobin

Star

Contour Dermatology
Elgart Aster & Paul Swerdlove
Reaction Marketing

Supporting

Steven Anders/Wade Endowment Fund
Bank of America
Dash and a Handful Catering
Desert Sun
Event Management Productions
Walter Leiss
James Fielding & Edison Briones
ITEX of the Desert Empire
Patrick Jordan
Kaiser Permanente
Barbara & Jerry Keller
Dr. Terri Ketover & Dr. Bart Ketover
Dorothy & Mel Lefkowitz
Macy’s
Dave Morgan
Bruce Purdy & Barrett Shepard
Dr. Suzanne Quardt & Rick Manzano
Renaissance Hotel
Savoury’s Catering
Time Warner Cable
UCR School of Medicine

Benefactor

Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians
Air Dimensional Design
The Five Hundred
Frank Kurland
David Lee
Gary Gaiser
City of Palm Springs
Pediatrix Medical Group
Quantum Medical Radiology
City of Rancho Mirage
Ann Sheffer & Bill Scheffler
Smirnoff, Diageo
Sysco
Union Bank
Vaso Bello Celebrations

Patron

Robert Archer & Charles Hilliar
Supervisor John Benoit
Mark Hamilton
David Hockney
Dr. Babak Khazaeni
Signs by Tomorrow
TapSnap
Trick Dog Films
Jim Watterson & George Martin

Media

The Advocate
CV Independent
Desert Charities News
Gay Desert Guide
Jones Agency
LIVE Magazine
Palm Springs Life
The Standard
Time Warner

Partners For Life Award: Jim Burba and Bob Hayes – In addition to being the sponsor for Lorna Luft’s 2013 Community Service award, the life-and-business-partners a year earlier pledged $10,000 at the 2012 gala. Although they produce conferences around the world for the hotel and tourism investment community, Palm Springs holds a special place in their heart … and their philanthropy.

100 Women Award: Carolyn Caldwell – president and CEO of Desert Regional Medical Center (DRMC,) Carolyn joined D.A.P.’s board in late 2012. Just a year later, she had secured a $1.5 million gift from DRMC’s parent, Tenet Healthcare, as lead sponsor of Get Tested Coachella Valley. Caldwell has been honored by the City of Palm Springs Human Rights Commission and for her ongoing commitment to affordable healthcare for everyone, including her role as one of the “champions” for Get Tested Coachella Valley. She currently serves as the chair of D.A.P.’s medical committee for the board of directors.

Arts and Activism Award: Jim Casey – co-chair of the Steve Chase gala for seven years with Barbara Keller, during which time Casey’s company, Integrated Wealth Management, contributed $1.5 million as presenting sponsor. Casey continues to be closely involved with D.A.P. both as a major donor and volunteer.

New Generation Arts and Activism Award: Danny Pintauro

2015 Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards Gala Co-Hosts
As one of the 2016 gala’s co-hosts, Leslie Jordan is perhaps best-known to most of us as Beverley Leslie from the smash hit TV show “Will & Grace,” for which he won an Emmy in 2006. Through movie writer-director Del Shores, his special connection to Palm Springs is perhaps his institutionalized-drag-queen Brother Boy character in the cult classic “Sordid Lives” which takes an hysterical look at family dysfunction beyond extreme.

No matter Jordan’s stature of just 4’11”, he will undoubtedly hold his own with the considerably more statuesque Ethylina Canne, who brings a special mix of sass and likeability to any stage. Growing up on a farm in scenic Morro Bay, a love of show tunes and “anything sparkly” was noticeable at a very early age. Fast forward to Palm Springs by way of San Francisco drag stages, she soon made herself known by winning the 1st Annual Desert Drag Race at Toucans Tiki Lounge and then Fan Favorite at D.A.P.’s 1st Annual Queen of the Desert benefit. Ethylina has endeared herself to many D.A.P. supporters ever since by always being ready whenever called on.

Gala attendees may not be ready for this 2016 co-host team … but that’s bound to be part of the fun!

2016 Steve Chase Humanitarian Awards Gala Co-Chairs

Patrick Jordan is a long-time member of D.A.P.’s Partners For Life annual giving program, a current D.A.P. board member, and a top fundraiser for the annual Desert AIDS Walk. Before his local success as a highly-successful broker at Bennion & Deville Homes, this honoree of the 2011 Partners for Life Award had a long career in the music industry.

Dave Morgan is also a long-time member of Partners For Life, as well as a sponsor of past Steve Chase galas, where he received the 2015 Partners For Life Award. He created the very popular Dancing with the Desert Stars fundraiser and his company, Reaction Marketing and Promotions, has produced it for each of its four years, raising more than $250,000 for D.A.P.

Dr. Suzanne Quardt, popularly known as “Dr. Q,” is a very active member of D.A.P.’s 100 Women annual giving program that supports programs and services for women and children whose lives are affected by HIV. She also serves on several committees at Eisenhower Medical Center, as their immediate past Chief of Plastic Surgery, and is an active supporter of the Women Leaders Forum and the American Heart Association.

Past Gala Information

First organized by and named for famed interior designer Steve Chase, these galas are a prime highlight of the desert community’s social season! Honorees, award presenters, and entertainers in the past years have included: Carol Channing, Matt Bomer, Peter Gallagher, Ann Margret, Tom Hanks, Betty Ford, Diahann Carrol, Sen. Ted Kennedy, Patti LaBelle, Betty White, Shirley MacLaine, Barry Manilow, Liza Minnelli, Debbie Reynolds and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.