Well-Being
Find out why DAISY recognition is so vital to nurses

Recognition could be vital for nurses. It serves as a reminder that the work you do matters.
DAISY Award, created in honor of Patrick Barnes, allows colleagues, patients and patient families to acknowledge extraordinary nurses and the contributions you make every single day. DAISY stands for diseases that attack the immune system. Barnes’ family established this award to recollect him and the nurses who cared for him while he suffered from idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, an autoimmune disease. For more information concerning the DAISY Award and its impact, read the article DAISY provides nurses with meaningful recognition digital edition.
“We never imagined that today the DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses program would honor nurses from nearly 3,400 health care facilities and schools of nursing around the world,” wrote Bonnie Barnes of FAAN and Mark Barnes of FAAN. “Most importantly, we learned that we are not the only patient’s family that has to thank the nurses.”
The DAISY Foundation is making a recent grant program
Read about our partnership with DAISY and the way it helps us truly support meaningful recognition for nurses around the globe. Other topics include: recent grant programHow DAISY can make it easier to stop ia continuing education module on conducting research in clinical settings. Article “Nursing Faculty Gets the Recognition It Deserves” highlights the DAISY faculty recognition program with an interview with Deborah Trautman, PhD, RN, FAAN, president of AACN and CEO of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing.
“The DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nursing Faculty was created to honor nursing educators who instill in their students a commitment to providing high-quality, compassionate care,” said Deborah Trautman, RN. “Faculty members help ensure that both the art and science of nursing are incorporated into each patient’s experience.”
DAISY’s recognition is something special
Learn about all the advantages of being a DAISY honoree by reading “10 benefits you may not know about DAISY” and read the article about the DAISY Award winner Grace Owojori, BSN, RN, CCRN. We also cannot forget about the people who nominate their colleagues, nurses, as we read in the article “DAISY nominations come from a good audience“is coming to light.
“It’s a testament to the skill and commitment of nurses and a powerful reminder that their patients notice when they step outside of themselves as caregivers,” said Charles Aasand, MBA, RN-BC, administrative director of behavioral health services at Portneuf Medical Center in Pocatello, Idaho, and coordinator DAISY program.
To read DAISY provides nurses with meaningful recognition and learn more about this impactful program!
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