Switch on your fundraiser and help the sickest kids get better sooner.
With every dollar you raise, you’ll help bring joy, fun and connection to children in hospital. You’ll help sick and injured kids feel relaxed, calm and happy – so they have the best chance to heal, and can get home faster.
Ready to get started? Switch on your fundraiser now.
Here's how your fundraising helps
$189
can help fund a music therapy session to help sick kids on their road to recovery to help reduce pre-surgery anxiety and distress.
$520
could help to train our volunteers with the skills needed to support families in times of stress.
$1,000
could help purchase an iPad to help distract and entertain kids confined to their beds?
Your funds in action
You’ll make hospital stays more fun
Your fundraiser will help buy puzzles, games and books that bring smiles to sick and injured kids during tough times.
You’ll bring music to bedsides
The money you raise can bring music to sick kids, helping make their hospital stay better, so they can get back to being kids.
You’ll share special milestones
The funds you raise will help buy gifts for children who are spending a birthday or Christmas in hospital, and bring joy to their day.
You’ll make memories for life
The donations you collect will help bring petting zoos, workshops, special guests and magical experiences to kids in hospital.
You’ll fuel imaginations
Your fundraising will help fill the hospital’s Kidzone with craft materials, colouring supplies and everything kids need to get creative.
Ollie’s story
Ollie had a life-saving heart transplant just after her first birthday. Since then, she’s been a regular at hospital – sometimes staying for months at a time.
Ollie’s compromised immune system means she’s often in isolation, and can’t spend time with other kids. But funds raised by people like you help bring play, fun and music to her bedside. And help her feel safe and supported on her toughest days.
Switch on your fundraiser today and you’ll help bring joy and connection to children like Ollie. And make sure they never face their treatment alone.
Ollie with her mum, Mandy.

