March 2010
Sarah
Bangel
,
RN
Medical Telemetry/Intermediate Care
Mayo Clinic Health System - Eau Claire
Eau Claire
,
WI
United States
For a nurse, it's so rewarding when patients share their appreciation for your care. And when their families also notice your special touch, it affirms the reason you became a nurse in the first place. Registered nurse Sarah Bangel recently had that experience when she received a surprise ceremony for a DAISY Award. The daughter of one of Sarah's patients nominated Sarah for the award.
"Sarah was one of my father's nurses during his one-week stay. Sarah's nursing skills are outstanding. She took great care of my father with her nursing skills but more importantly with her compassionate caring. She made sure he was comfortable, she answered all of his and our questions, and she made his stay easier. "Sarah, thank you for going above and beyond for my father and for our family."
The praise meant a great deal to Sarah. "It's so rewarding to know that we make a difference for our patients. It's a pleasure doing a job that I love. It really is."
Sarah was given a beautiful statue and treated, along with her coworkers, to delicious cinnamon rolls, a DAISY tradition. "I'm not used to all this attention," Sarah said, signing the DAISY banner that then hung in her department for a month. "You deserve it," said the clinical nursing director. Since she interviewed for her job, Sarah has been the "epitome of what a nurse would be," said the director of Medical Telemetry/Intermediate Care. "We immediately saw the compassion in her eyes; we immediately saw why she went into nursing," said a co-worker. "She's quiet, but she gives that excellent care and that extra touch to the patients."
"Sarah was one of my father's nurses during his one-week stay. Sarah's nursing skills are outstanding. She took great care of my father with her nursing skills but more importantly with her compassionate caring. She made sure he was comfortable, she answered all of his and our questions, and she made his stay easier. "Sarah, thank you for going above and beyond for my father and for our family."
The praise meant a great deal to Sarah. "It's so rewarding to know that we make a difference for our patients. It's a pleasure doing a job that I love. It really is."
Sarah was given a beautiful statue and treated, along with her coworkers, to delicious cinnamon rolls, a DAISY tradition. "I'm not used to all this attention," Sarah said, signing the DAISY banner that then hung in her department for a month. "You deserve it," said the clinical nursing director. Since she interviewed for her job, Sarah has been the "epitome of what a nurse would be," said the director of Medical Telemetry/Intermediate Care. "We immediately saw the compassion in her eyes; we immediately saw why she went into nursing," said a co-worker. "She's quiet, but she gives that excellent care and that extra touch to the patients."