St. Peter’s Hospital Honors Exceptional Nurse Cassandra Marshall with DAISY Award

On May 15, the Recruitment and Retention Nursing Council at St. Peter’s Hospital proudly hosted its quarterly DAISY Award Ceremony in recognition of extraordinary nurses. Congratulations to our winner, Cassandra Marshall (4 PAV), and all of the nominees!

DAISY is an acronym for Diseases Attacking the Immune System. The family of Patrick Barnes, who died at age 33 of complications of Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP), created the DAISY Award to honor his memory and recognize the healing work of the nurses who had cared for him and continue to care for patients everywhere. The DAISY Award has been adopted by health care facilities across the United States, and is now part of the culture of St. Peter’s Hospital.

“Congratulations to Cassandra Marshall and all of our nurse nominees on the presentation of this DAISY Award,” said Celeste DesChamps, RN, MS, NEA-BC, interim chief nursing officer at St. Peter’s Hospital. “Cassandra exemplifies the core values of St. Peter’s Hospital, providing exceptional, compassionate care to our patients. This recognition highlights the positive feedback we get every day from patients and their families: nurses at St. Peter’s Hospital are doing extraordinary things.”

Attendees included members of Cassandra’s family and a patient’s family member, who nominated her for the award.

There are more than 2,000 health care facilities in all 50 states and 14 other countries, committed to honoring nurses with The DAISY Award.

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