Latest DAISY News. Click here to read our quarterly update here which shares announcements, best practices, recent collaborations, resources and an offer from Cinnabon.
Articles/Blogs
Quarterly Update
Beautiful blog about DAISY from our friends at LiquidCompass! The time for recognition of nurses is ALWAYS!
His Name Was Patrick: The Birth of the Meaningful Recognition Movement
Recognition is Especially Meaningful in the Age of Coronavirus
Click here to read the latest blog by Bonnie and Mark Barnes, FAANs, Co-founders, The DAISY Foundation
Available from JONA: DAISY Faculty: Role Modeling Compassion for the Next Generation of Nurses
DAISY Faculty: Role Modeling Compassion for the Next Generation of Nurses
Sweeney, Cynthia Divens
DAISY Award reaches 1 million thank you's — and it’s just the beginning
Read our latest blog installment on exceeding 1 million thank you's to nurses!
Inspiring Nurses to See the Extraordinary in their Ordinary
The DAISY Foundation and Creative Health Care Management came together because of a shared love of the work of nurses and a keen sense of the importance of nursing care to patient wellbeing. At the DAISY Foundation, we have long wondered why nurses have such a hard time seeing the full value of their work.
Millennial nurses appreciate meaningful recognition for patient care
Millennials, the generation born between 1982 and 2000, have surpassed baby boomers as the nation’s largest living generation, according to 2016 population estimates by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Inspire Extraordinary Care Through Nurse-Focused Recognition
In 1999, my 33-year-old stepson, Patrick Barnes, died of complications of ITP, an auto-immune disease. We spent eight weeks in the hospital with Patrick, experiencing the best of care from a team of nurses whose clinical skill and compassionate care touched us deeply.
“All We Wanted to Do Was Say, ‘Thank You.’”
About J. Patrick Barnes
One morning in late 1999, 33-year-old J. Patrick Barnes awoke to blood blisters in his mouth. The two-time survivor of Hodgkin’s Disease was quickly admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP), a rare autoimmune disease that affects the blood’s ability to clot normally.