Story
As some of you know, I lost my uncle to a brain tumour in 2009 at the tender age of 37. As I get older myself, it becomes even more of a realisation that this really could happen to any of us. At the time, Sue Ryder's Thorpe Hall Hospice became a home to myself and my family - and having been hit by the pandemic, they urgently need more funding.
Here's why 👉 Lockdown, PPE and visitor restrictions didn't stop Sue Ryder. They kept on caring because people like me cared too. But there is one thing that could stop them now. With less income from their shops and many fundraising events cancelled this year, they already have £2m less coming in each month than they need to keep running at full capacity. We are now in a second national lockdown; every week Sue Ryder's shops are closed the charity loses an additional £500,000. Coronavirus cases are on the rise again and conditions like cancer are going untreated. Sue Ryder Nurses and healthcare staff are needed more than ever at a time when they simply don't have enough funding. Were facing an end-of-life care crisis the likes of which we've never seen before.
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