DAISY Award Recipient, Jeanne Buchanan!

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Jeanne Buchanan, RN, CDE is well known for her dedication to the field of pediatric diabetes. She was nominated by her peers and won the DAISY Award which recognizes extraordinary nurses. on January 14, 2014. 

What exactly is the DAISY Award? It was inspired by a patient who received exceptional nursing care and his family created the DAISY Foundation which is now recognized in nearly 2,000 healthcare organizations and in 14 countries.

In late 1999, at the age of 33, Patrick Barnes awoke with some blood blisters in his mouth. Having survived Hodgkins Disease twice, he was admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with the auto-immune disease, ITP (Idiopathic Thrombocytopenia Purpura). Pat and his wife, Tena, had just given us our first grandchild two months before he became sick, and we are so blessed that we were able to spend the eight weeks of his hospitalization with him and his family.

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During those weeks, we experienced the best of Nursing. We were there to see the clinical skill that dealt with his very complex medical situation, the fast thinking of nurses who saved his life more than once, that nursing excellence that took years to hone to the best of the profession. But frankly, as a patient family, we rather expected that Pat would have great clinical care. That was why he was in the hospital. What we did not expect was the way his nurses delivered that care - the kindness and compassion they gave Pat and all of us in his family every day. We were awed by the way the nurses touched him and spoke with him, even when he was on a ventilator and totally sedated. The way they informed and educated us eased our minds. They truly helped us through the darkest hours of our lives, with soft voices of hope and strong loving hugs that to this day, we still feel.

Just days after he died, we began talking about what we would do to help fill the giant hole in our hearts Pat’s passing had left. Tena came up with the acronym, DAISY, standing for diseases attacking the immune system, and we filed our papers to become a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization. As we discussed what to do in Patrick’s memory, we knew that first and foremost, we needed to say Thank You for the gifts nurses give their patients and families every day, just as we had experienced.

We created The DAISY Award For Extraordinary Nurses and piloted the program at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance whose nurses cared for Patrick during the last weeks of his life. Our goal was to ensure that nurses know how deserving they are of our society's profound respect for the education, training, brainpower, and skill they put into their work, and especially for the caring with which they deliver their care. At the time we started the program, we could not have anticipated that The DAISY Award would come to be regarded as a strategic tool for nurse recruitment and retention and would be adopted by healthcare facilities all over the U.S. and beyond.

Congratulations, Jeanne!