BMC North Adams Campus Renal Dialysis Nurse Earns DAISY Award

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Michael Tessier, RN, a BMC North Adams Renal Dialysis nurse, was recently honored with the DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses. He stands with Brenda Cadorette, BMC Chief Nursing Officer.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Berkshire Medical Center (BMC) Renal Dialysis nurse Michael Tessier, RN, has received the DAISY Award for Extraordinary Nurses, a national nursing recognition program that has been adopted by thousands of hospitals to honor individual nurses who have had a tremendous impact on patient care. 
 
Tessier, who serves in the Renal Dialysis Center at the North Adams Campus of BMC, was honored for the compassion and above and beyond care he provided for a Renal patient who was facing end of life, according to a press release.
 
According to one of the nominations submitted for Tessier, "Recently a patient who receives dialysis in North Adams was admitted to the main hospital. After full diagnosis, it was realized that he had reached a time to make end of life decisions. Dr. David Albert helped the patient to make a decision to stop dialysis and go home with Hospice support. When Mike Tessier nurse heard this news, he was deeply saddened and took it upon himself to visit the patient, on his day off, prior to the patient's discharge from BMC."
 
The nomination said, "The patient relayed that Mike sat with him while preparing for his discharge and let him talk about his decision and how he felt. Mike supported him in his bravery and even offered to take him fishing the following day if he felt up to it as they had talked about sharing this activity at some point but had never made a firm plan. Mike walked with the patient to the main entrance and assisted him into his family member's car. Mike deeply impacted by this interaction and later received a message from the patient's sister informing him of her brother's passing and thanking him for taking the time to visit and expressing how much it had meant to her brother and to all of her family."
 
A second succinct nomination lauded Tessier for his caring by saying, "It is hard to describe just one way that Mike displays his caring and compassion."
 
Using the acronym PETALS, BMC's criteria for nominating a nurse for a DAISY Award is:
 
P: Passion and Compassion – for nursing and the care they provided
E: Empathy – toward individual patients and their loved ones
T: Trust and Teamwork – does the nurse convey a sense of trust and security
A: Admirable Attributes
L: Love, for patient and profession
 
According to a press release, the DAISY Foundation was started in memory of Patrick Barnes, who passed away in 1999 from complications of the auto immune disease, ITP. His family wanted to turn their grief into something positive and create something that would capture his special spirit. The DAISY acronym stands for Diseases Attacking the Immune System. As they brainstormed on what the foundation would do they kept coming back to conversations about how wonderful his nurses were. Their mission became to express gratitude to nurses with programs that recognize them for their extraordinary skillful, compassionate care provided to patients and families.
 
The program is now in over 4,500 healthcare facilities across the US and around the world.

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Veteran Spotlight: Army Sgt. John Magnarelli

By Wayne SoaresSpecial to iBerkshires
PLYMOUTH, Mass. — John Magnarelli served his country in the Army's 82nd Airborne Division and the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment in Vietnam from May 4, 1969, to April 10, 1970, as a sergeant. 
 
He grew up in North Quincy and was drafted into the Army on Aug. 12, 1968. 
 
"I had been working in a factory, Mathewson Machine Works, as a drill press operator since I graduated high school. It was a solid job and I had fallen into a comfortable routine," he said. "That morning, I left home with my dad, who drove me to the South Boston Army Base, where all new recruits were processed into service. There was no big send off — he just dropped me off on his way to work. He shook my hand and said, 'good luck and stay safe.'"
 
He would do his basic training at Fort Jackson, S.C., which was built in 1917 and named after President Andrew Jackson. 
 
"It was like a city — 20,000 people, 2,500 buildings and 50 firing ranges on 82 square miles," he said. "I learned one thing very quickly, that you never refer to your rifle as a gun. That would earn you the ire of the drill sergeant and typically involve a great deal of running." 
 
He continued proudly, "after never having fired a gun in my life, I received my marksmanship badge at the expert level."
 
He was assigned to Fort Benning, Ga., for Combat Leadership School then sent to Vietnam.
 
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