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  • Has your baby or child received lifesaving hospital treatment for an illness or injury within the last year?
  • Were they admitted to one of the following hospitals: Stepping Hill Hospital, North Manchester General Hospital, Royal Bolton Hospital, Royal Oldham Hospital, or Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust (Wythenshawe Hospital)?
  • Would you be happy to share your story with children’s health charity MedEquip4Kids in order to be entered into a free prize draw?

We’re looking for a special family to benefit from a well-deserved break this Easter at the fabulous LEGOLAND Windsor Resort from Friday 30th March to Sunday 1st April 2018. The prize includes admission to the site for up to two adults and two children, as well as two nights’ accommodation in a family room at the Slough Windsor Copthorne hotel, including a full English breakfast.

The holiday was generously donated to us by Plaster Plus Interiors Ltd.

Based in Manchester, MedEquip4Kids improves children’s health by funding equipment and facilities not available from limited NHS resources. Last year we launched a special appeal to provide new equipment for the hospitals mentioned above, since they were among those that treated the young people injured during the Manchester Arena terror attack.

To enter the draw for this fantastic prize, complete the form below and tell us how your child benefited from the care they received, and if possible, what medical equipment was used in their treatment. Please note that we would like permission to publish your story if we choose to on our website or social media. We’d be grateful for any photographs you could send us too.

This draw has now closed.

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“The specialist treatment chairs are a new vital resource for the therapy team and nursing staff to be able to safely and comfortably sit extremely complex, dependant, critical care patients out of bed. The chairs allow us to begin the patient’s rehabilitation journey by providing appropriate postural support at the same time as pressure relief to allow the patient to build the muscle strength to hold themselves up against gravity. This allows them to begin to interact with their environment in a more normal way, enabling them to participate in meaningful activities such as meal times and activities of daily living.”

Physiotherapy Team
Critical Care Unit
Royal Preston Hospital

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