How
do I order flowers to be delivered to a hospital?
When you call
your florist, have the following ready: the name of the
hospital, the patient's name, room number (if possible) and when
you want the flowers delivered. It is also good to know if the
hospital has a policy regarding flowers. For instance, most
urgent care and intensive care units do not allow flowers.
Sometimes hospital rooms have certain display areas for flowers,
but they must be a specified size. Your florist will know about
the hospitals in your area.
Is it okay to wait
and send get well flowers once someone returns home from the
hospital?
Absolutely.
While patients can look forward to home's familiar, comfortable
environment to help ease pain and speed recovery, recovering at
home can be lonely. Flowers are a great way to let someone know
you're thinking of him, even if you can't visit him in person.
Does someone who
is ill have to have been in the hospital to get flowers? What if
he or she is sick in bed or just feeling blue?
Flowers are a
heartwarming and appreciated gesture any time. They are a
simple, sincere and unobtrusive way to lift spirits, bring a
smile to a tired face or brighten up a room for someone who is
under the weather. In fact, they might be just the trick to
cheer someone up.
I heard that
flowers are good for your health. Is that true?
According to
recent behavioral research conducted at Rutgers University, the
presence of flowers triggers happy emotions, heightens feelings
of life satisfaction and affects social behavior in a positive
manner far beyond what is normally believed. "Common sense tells
us that flowers make us happy," said Dr. Jeanette Haviland-Jones,
lead researcher on the study. "Now, science shows that not only
do flowers make us happier than we know, they have strong
positive effects on our emotional well being."
We'd like to thank our friends
at the Society of American
Florists for this information