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‘Angelic’ Hospice Nurse Helped Family During Trying Week

‘Angelic’ Hospice Nurse Helped Family During Trying Week.

A nurse with Heyman HospiceCare at Floyd will forever be remembered by a family for her tender care and compassion during a week that saw them say farewell to two loved ones. 

A family member describes Terra Jones, the latest DAISY Award recipient, as a "beautiful, angelic nurse." 

The DAISY award, which is recognized internationally, was established by the family of Patrick Barnes after he died from an auto-immune disease while being treated in a Seattle hospital. His family was thankful for the care he received and created the award to thank bedside nurses for the job they do. The family came up with DAISY– an acronym for Diseases Attacking the Immune System. 

Jones formed an instant bond with her father the first day she visited him at their home, his daughter said. When Jones learned her new patient was a football fan, they shared team facts and football history. The patient's daughter said Jones showed her father respect for what he knew and built a bridge of trust between them. 

"We had never seen our dad sick, so all of this was new and very scary to us," said the patient's daughter. "Terra was always patient and reassuring of our doubts."

Jones also coached the patient's wife to talk to her husband, sharing all that he needed to hear and all that was on her heart.

“Mom did just that. What a beautiful farewell message she spoke. It was funny, yet sweet and unforgettable,” the daughter said. “She told him how much she loved him and yet she was mad at him for going first; but for him to on ahead, meet Jesus, and watch for her because she would be coming soon. 'It won’t be long,' she firmly stated, 'I am right behind you.'"

The day after her patient died, his wife fell and hit her head, sustaining a massive brain bleed. She also became a Heyman HospiceCare patient. Jones visited the family in the hospital, this time not as a nurse, but as a friend, and the gentleman's wife fulfilled her promise to her husband, passing just one week after her husband.

"To our family, Terra was not just a nurse, a medical professional, or a family advocate. We were not just another family with a dying loved one. We were people in need and she was our angel. Our vessel of mercy," the patient's daughter said. "She was our DAISY."

Along with a DAISY pin, Jones was also presented with a sculpture entitled A Healer’s Touch. Each piece is hand-carved for the DAISY Foundation by an artist of the Shona Tribe in Zimbabwe. 

About Atrium Health Floyd

The Atrium Health Floyd family of health care services is a leading medical provider and economic force in northwest Georgia and northeast Alabama. Atrium Health Floyd is part of Charlotte, North Carolina-based Advocate Health, the third-largest nonprofit health system in the United States, created from the combination of Atrium Health and Advocate Aurora Health. Atrium Health Floyd strategically combined with Harbin Clinic in 2024 and employs more than 5,200 teammates who provide care in over 40 medical specialties at four facilities: Atrium Health Floyd Medical Center – a 361-bed full-service, acute care hospital and regional referral center in Rome, Georgia; Atrium Health Floyd Polk Medical Center in Cedartown, Georgia; and Atrium Health Floyd Cherokee Medical Center in Centre, Alabama; and Atrium Health Floyd Medical Center Behavioral Health, also in Rome. Together, Atrium Health Floyd and Harbin Clinic provide primary care, specialty care and urgent care throughout northwest Georgia and northeast Alabama. Atrium Health Floyd also operates a stand-alone emergency department in Chattooga County, the first such facility to be built from the ground-up in Georgia.