Newtown, Pa., resident, Madison Sias, BSN, RN, received the DAISY award for Hunterdon Health.

Madison Sias, BSN, RN, 5 South, received the Daisy Award for Hunterdon Health. The award is part of the DAISY Foundation’s program to recognize the clinical skill and the compassion nurses provide to patients and families every day.

A patient wrote, “Madison was my nurse for the night I spent in the cardiology unit on Monday, Jan. 22, 2024. She made my stay feel like I was at a hotel. Madison was very pleasant and good natured; it was a joy to have her come to care for me all throughout the night. She communicated everything to me so as I was never guessing as to what was to occur and answered all my questions. She was prompt in her care as she always came at the times she said. Madison attended to all my needs in a pleasant and professional manner. Overall, Madison was the best nurse I’ve ever had while overnight in a hospital.”

The not-for-profit DAISY Foundation is based in Glen Ellen, Calif., and was established by family members in memory of J. Patrick Barnes. Patrick died at the age of 33 in late 1999 from complications of Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP), a little known but not uncommon autoimmune disease. The care Patrick and his family received from nurses while he was ill inspired this unique means of thanking nurses for making a profound difference in the lives of their patients and patients’ families.

“When Patrick was critically ill, our family experienced first-hand the remarkable skill and care nurses provide patients every day and night,” said Bonnie Barnes, FAAN, president and co-founder of The DAISY Foundation. “Yet these unsung heroes are seldom recognized for the super-human work they do. The kind of work the nurses throughout Hunterdon Health are called on to do every day epitomizes the purpose of The DAISY Award.”

The DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses has been adopted by 3,500 health care facilities and schools of nursing in all 50 states and 21 other countries, committed to honoring their nurses for their extraordinary care and compassion. Individual nurses may be nominated by patients, families and colleagues and they are chosen by a Hunterdon Health committee.

“We are proud to be among the health care organizations participating in the DAISY Award program,” said Chief Nursing Officer and Vice President of Patient Care Services, Mary Jo Loughlin, DNP, RN, NEA-BC, Hunterdon Health. “Nurses are heroes every day. It’s important that our nurses know their work is highly valued, and The DAISY Foundation provides a way for us to do that,”

DAISY Award recipients are presented with a certificate, a DAISY Award pin, a beautiful hand-carved serpentine stone sculpture from Zimbabwe, and a spotlight page on The DAISY Foundation website, featuring a photo and telling the story of why this nurse was honored.

At each award presentation, all the nurses and staff in the recipient’s unit are treated to cinnamon rolls. The reason? Once, Patrick ate his father’s cinnamon roll when he was in the hospital without an appetite for food. He then requested one for the next day — and enough for all the nurses in the unit.

To nominate a nurse who works for Hunterdon Health or to learn more, visit www.hunterdonhealth.org/services/careers/nursing-careers/daisy-award.