DAISY Award winner Jonathan Barrett, pictured with ER clinical coordinator Andrea Smith, ER director Kevin Kremer and Beaufort Memorial President and CEO Russell Baxley. Photo courtesy of Beaufort Memorial Hospital

BMH ER nurse Jonathan Barrett receives DAISY Award for compassion, commitment to service


He puts his heart and soul into what he does’

Special to The Island News

It takes a special kind of person to be a nurse.

Evidence of that fact can be found in any healthcare facility, but the evidence is especially obvious at the Beaufort Memorial Pratt Emergency Center.

Jonathan Barrett, RN, BSN, who joined Beaufort Memorial in 2023, was awarded with a DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses on Friday, Aug. 22, in a surprise ceremony that brought his mother from Canada to witness his achievement in kindness and nursing excellence.

Heather Brewer, a Lowcountry mother whose daughter received care in the Beaufort Memorial ER, said when she nominated Jonathan that he had performed “one of God’s great acts of service.”

“I am so thankful you have someone who thinks on their feet,” Brewer said. “The way he anticipated things before they happened was awe-inspiring.”

Barrett received two DAISY nominations earlier this year, and Beaufort Memorial ER director Kevin Kremer, RN, BSN, said that his name is a mainstay on glowing patient satisfaction surveys.

Kremer shared a few of these comments calling Jonathan “one of the kindest men I’ve ever met,” a “truly one of a kind person,” “attentive” and highlighting that he always goes “out of his way.”

“Jonathan does a great job every day that he comes to work. He is such a kind, compassionate person, and that shows through to his care every day,” Kremer said. “Every patient he has loves him.”

The second nomination was submitted by a fellow Beaufort Memorial employee, Carson Frey, a CT scan technician, who was looked after by Barrett after she suddenly became dizzy while being severely dehydrated earlier this year.

Barrett, at the end of his own shift, wasted no time rushing Frey to the ER, getting her on an IV drip and bringing in Dr. Saeed Rehman, the Beaufort Memorial Pratt Emergency Center medical director.

“Jonathan collected my labs and made sure I was getting hydrated, and only then did I start to feel better,” she said. “I don’t like being the patient, but Jonathan’s dedication and hard work allowed me to calm down and trust that I was in good hands.”

He even stayed with Frey after his shift ended so that she wasn’t alone as she waited for her husband’s arrival.

“It’s so easy to pass over what he does daily as ‘just a job,’ but for Jonathan, he puts his heart and soul into what he does, and his patients are better for it,” Frey added. “I appreciate his kindness, respect and hard work to make sure I was not only safe, but to ensure that I felt safe.”

She said she was excited for Barrett to receive this honor, and felt like he went above and beyond in caring for her.

At the ceremony, Beaufort Memorial President and CEO Russell Baxley shared the meaning behind the daisy flower. The small, white blooms represent innocence, he said, as well as purity and new beginnings.

“I really think nursing is a very pure profession. You come to work every day, and you serve people with compassion,” he said. “I heard a lot today about the compassion that Jonathan shows to his patients. Compassion is one of our core values. He is representing a core value, and that is special unto itself.”

Daisies also represent love and joy, and Barrett is rarely – if ever – seen without a positive, joyful outlook – “something that is hard to do in healthcare,” Baxley added.

The joy that is symbolized by daisies shone brightly at the celebration, and especially on the face of Barrett’s mother Pam, who was visiting her son in the Lowcountry from Newfoundland, Canada – a region that is more than 2,000 miles from Beaufort.

The surprise celebration was held on Barrett’s day off, a day he expected to be spending with his mother during her visit when he was asked to come to work for a “meeting.” At the surprise ceremony, several of Barrett’s colleagues showed their appreciation alongside his beaming mother.

“I am proud of this guy every day,” she gushed, hugging her son.

About the DAISY Award

Developed in 1999 by a Seattle couple to honor the nurses who took care of their dying son, the DAISY Award has since been adopted by healthcare facilities all over the world.

Nominated nurses’ clinical skills, and especially their compassionate care, exemplify the kind of nurse that patients, their families and our staff recognize as an outstanding role model.

Anyone can nominate a Beaufort Memorial nurse for the prestigious honor. Applications are available throughout the hospital and at BeaufortMemorial.org/DAISY.

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