Built to Last?
Securing the future of children’s palliative care
Right now, families caring for seriously ill children aren’t getting the care they need, because our children’s palliative care sector just isn’t built to last. Shockingly, the extent to which they can access the palliative care they need depends on where they live.
Every family deserves the chance to make precious memories with their child – supported by the right care, at the right time, no matter where they live. That kind of support should never depend on a postcode. Wouldn’t you agree?
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£310m funding gap
In England, we think there is a £310m funding gap for children's palliative care. It's just 0.16% of NHS England's annual budget and 70 times smaller than its increase in 2024/25.
Thank you for signing our open letter and joining the campaign for fairer end of life care for seriously ill children. We're ready to deliver your demands to 10 Downing Street.
2,400 of you signed bereaved mother, Clare's, letter which calls for fairer children’s palliative care following her experience of caring for her son, Oliver, who died from a brain tumour when he was 11 years old.
Read Clare's letter

I had to fight for the right end of life care for my son
When Clare settled in the North West of England, she never thought she’d be fighting for her child’s care because of where she’d chosen to live.
Oliver died peacefully on 2 December 2023. Clare, Oliver’s mum, describes his death as “a good experience, if you can describe it as that.” But this isn’t the case for all seriously ill children across the UK.
Clare made herself heard to get access to the care she felt that Oliver needed. She says “I am very aware of how this time can unravel for families. So, we count ourselves lucky.”
The area where Clare lives is one of 39 in England which don’t, or only partially, provide 24/7 end of life care at home. This needs to change.
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50% don't feel supported
Funding and staffing shortages have left families feeling abandoned and overwhelmed. Only half (50%) feel well supported, while nearly half (47%) feel like they have no help with practical or financial matters.

Our latest report: Built to Last? The State of Children's Palliative Care in 2025
Every child deserves the chance to live a full life, supported by care that enables them to thrive. Children’s palliative care provides this essential support to seriously ill children and their families – helping them spend precious time together and accessing the care they need, when and where they need it.
Yet our new report shows that despite some progress in the past year, families struggle to access this specialist support. Not because of the complexity of their needs, but because of where they live.
Our system is continuing to fail too many seriously ill children.
*ICBs are identified as formally commissioning services that meet national quality standards if they supplied a relevant service specification explicitly addressing the specific standard in question. The lack of a relevant service specification does not necessarily indicate that no services are being provided.
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973 children's community nurses
There are also some worrying workforce shortages. The NHS currently employs 973 Community Children's Nurses. Roughly 4,000 more are needed to meet safe staffing levels.