A huge thank you to our contributors for donating their time and expertise to Humpty to help produce this edition of the Good Egg Magazine.
CONTRIBUTORS
Johanna Griggs AM, Humpty Patron
Ray Martin AM, Television Journalist & Longtime Humpty Supporter
Ross Greenwood, Finance Expert
Maggie Dent, Leading Parenting Author & Humpty Supporter
Sharyn Ghidella, News Presenter & Journalist
Associate Professor Kath Browning Carmo
Paul Francis OAM, Humpty Founder & Executive Director
Claire Reaney, Humpty CEO & Managing Director
Samantha Howie, Humpty Head of Marketing & Engagement
Kimberly Clausen, Humpty Marketing Specialist
Johanna Griggs AM with Belinda Munro and her daughter Tilly LABOUR OF LOVE
YOUR PRIVACY
Humpty will only collect personal information to process donations, issue tax receipts and send you updates. Our privacy policy is available on our website humpty.org.au or call us on 1300 486 789 (1300 HUMPTY). If you do not wish to receive communications from the Humpty Dumpty Foundation please email: humpty@humpty.com.au or mail Humpty Dumpty Foundation: Suite 204, 10 - 12 Clarke Street, CROWS NEST NSW 2065
The Humpty Dumpty Foundation acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the Traditional Custodians of the lands and waters on which we serve and pays respect to the past and present First Peoples and Elders of Country throughout Australia.
Content in this magazine may be of a sensitive nature to some readers.
What’s inside
Founder’s message
After 28 years as Chairman of the Humpty Dumpty Foundation, I have stepped down from the Chair role. I will proudly remain on the Humpty Board as a Director. I am truly excited to see John Bevan - someone I have known and respected for over 20 years - take on the role of Chairman. He will be such a steady and firm hand as Humpty continues to evolve and respond to the increasing number of requests from hospitals and health services right across Australia.
Stepping back from the Chair role will allow me to focus more closely on some special areas that are close to my heart, particularly improving health outcomes in remote and regional Australia. One area in urgent need of attention is the Northern Territory, where the infant mortality rate is nearly three times the national average.
In recent weeks, I’ve had the privilege of reconnecting with many of the companies and individuals who make up the wider Humpty Family. Along with other charities, I was invited to speak at a Metcash conference in Hobart. Metcash has been a loyal supporter of Humpty for several years, and it was wonderful to join them again.
I also travelled to the Yarra Valley to meet with James Halliday AM — Australia’s iconic wine expert — and several of the region’s outstanding wineries, including Oakridge, Yarra Yering, Yering Station, and Yeringberg, all of whom have been generous and long-standing supporters.
Then, together with Johanna Griggs AM, Humpty’s Patron, we travelled to Darwin, Tennant Creek, and Alice Springs Hospitals to speak directly with the dedicated medical teams and deepen our understanding of their current situations and most urgent needs.
On our return, Johanna and I made the trip to Bathurst Hospital for an update on their medical needs and then visited Orange Hospital. One of our major donors, Bob Holt, who lives in Katherine, generously donated equipment to Orange Hospital where his daughter, Kim, lives. Kim joined us to see the equipment her family had provided and hear firsthand the difference it is making to the health outcomes of local children.
These visits and the chance to connect with so many members of the Humpty Family have powerfully reinforced for me just how critical these relationships are.
Together, we are making a real and lasting difference to the health of children across Australia — and when we join forces, we can achieve even more.
If you would like to help, please take a look at Humpty’s Wish List on pages 13-20 or call me on 1300 489 789 (1300 HUMPTY).
Paul Francis OAM Founder & Executive Director
Our mission is to raise funds to provide essential and often lifesaving medical equipment and healthcare initiatives for sick kids in hospitals in every corner of Australia.
How a Breast Pump Became a Family’s Lifeline
By Johanna Griggs AM
For years, Belinda and her husband Max volunteered at many of Humpty’s events. Belinda also worked at Humpty, initially heading up office management but ended up working across almost every department with her endless positivity and enthusiasm. One of the most heartwarming parts of her role was being able to visit hospitals with kindhearted donors and witness them seeing the equipment they had donated.
She never imagined that one day she and Max would find themselves relying on many of those vital pieces, plastered with the distinct yellow plaques acknowledging generous individuals and businesses, to help keep their darling baby girl Matilda alive.
When pregnant with her son Hamish (now 4), Belinda was diagnosed with an autoimmune condition named Evans Syndrome, which causes Thrombocytopenia (loss of platelets which clot blood) and Haemolytic Anaemia (loss of red blood cells), which put her pregnancy in the highrisk category. She manages her flare-ups with medication, but when she fell pregnant with Matilda, it meant constant monitoring, until the decision was made to induce the birth
at 38 weeks. And that’s where Matilda made her entry into the world.
After such a fraught pregnancy, to see Matilda arrive safely and seemingly healthy was an enormous relief. After receiving the "all clear" from her obstetrician and paediatrician, Belinda and Matilda settled into the maternity ward and were looking forward to getting Tilly home to meet her older brother. But less than 24 hours later, things had changed dramatically.
A nurse noticed that Matilda was looking a little jaundiced. They tested her bilirubin levels and received quite the shock… for a baby less than 24 hours old she was just below the threshold for a blood transfusion. Somehow the Evans Syndrome antigens that destroyed Belinda’s red blood cells had transferred through her placenta and were attacking Matilda’s immune system. Untreated, severe jaundice can lead to brain damage and hearing loss.
Matilda was whisked off to the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at Royal North Shore Hospital, where she underwent phototherapy treatment, including Triple Light Phototherapy and Quadruple Light Phototherapy (where her crib was lined in foil as well). She had feeding tubes in (as it was important that she always remained under the full phototherapy lights). Her vitals were constantly being monitored, and she was on a strict feeding routine every three hours.
Across Australia, around 1 in 5 babies require emergency intervention at birth. It's not unusual at all for a new mum with a baby in NICU to be unable to directly breastfeed
Johanna Griggs AM with Belinda and Baby Matilda
their baby. With seriously unwell and/or preterm babies, the goal of the nursing staff is to keep these tiny babies as peaceful and undisturbed as possible, so that every iota of energy goes into letting them grow and develop. If you are able to, you are strongly encouraged to provide breast milk by pumping, to give your newborn the nutrients and antibodies their little bodies need so desperately in those important early days.
As any new mum in this situation knows, it’s an incredibly tricky time to navigate – you are waiting for your milk to arrive, you know you need to pump to keep your milk coming in, and if you are lucky enough, like Belinda was, you have a hospital-grade breast pump available to let you do that.
“It was such an emotional time – I was feeling unbelievably guilty that my baby girl was sick because of me.
We were watching her, looking so tiny, and so alone in a crib. I mean, I took great pride in the fact that almost all the equipment that was helping her had been donated by Humpty supporters. But we still felt utterly helpless.
Tilly was in the NICU for six days. We were separated from her each night and even though I knew she was in the safest hands with the wonderful nurses, doctors and midwives, that car ride home from the hospital each night with an empty car capsule and an empty bassinet at home was utterly heartbreaking.
The only way I knew I could contribute to her getting better was to pump the milk that I knew would give her the very best nutrition in those critical early days that she needed. It was incredibly important to me that during this time of uncertainty and helplessness, this would be something I could contribute; my gift to her.
And Max was then able to help with the tube feeding and eventually with some bottle feeds, meaning he too was also able to establish a nice bond.
I knew these pumps were hot property in the major city hospital we were in… and that there was endless demand for them. It made me question, what do new mums do in hospitals in remote or regional areas if this type of
equipment isn’t available? We just felt so lucky and grateful that there wasn’t any impediment to us being able to help our daughter in the only way we could at that time.”
Ironically, as Belinda was using one of the pumps and scrolling through her phone, our 2024 Pumped for Life Mother’s Day Appeal post popped up. Without hesitation, she made a donation, knowing personally the difference that a simple pump could make.
"Navigating being a new mum while also having a sick baby is incredibly challenging – but for me, there was so much comfort in knowing Humpty was there to support new bubs like Matilda, and new mums like me, and I just wanted to be able to help other mums who might’ve found themselves in the same position I was."
This year, more than 100 hospital-grade breast pumps were requested as part of our 2025 Pumped for Life Mother’s Day Appeal - a testament to the ongoing need. With medical-grade breast pumps remaining on Humpty’s Wish List year-round, donations continue to make a life-changing difference for new mums and their babies across Australia all throughout the year.
Support Pumped for Life today!
Baby Matilda today with her Humpty Teddy
Max and son Hamish visiting Baby Tilly in the NICU at Royal North Shore Hospital
Baby Matildainthe NICU
About Humpty
We see a future where every Australian child has access to the healthcare they need, no matter where they live.
Our mission is to raise funds to provide essential and often lifesaving medical equipment and healthcare initiatives for sick kids in hospitals in every corner of Australia.
Humpty bridges the gap between limited and stretched health budgets and unmet paediatric medical equipment needs of hospitals and health services Australia-wide.
Humpty keeps families closer together by helping children recover closer to home
When you choose to donate to Humpty, you will help Australian children benefit from the best healthcare and equipment faster.
Humpty empowers healthcare workers in big city hospitals and in rural and remote communities
The Bradman of Wines and His Extraordinary Gift to Humpty
By Ray Martin AM
I call them “the sweet mysteries of life’.
What’s the Big Bang Theory all about? Why do male sea horses give birth? And how did Paul Francis talk James Halliday AM – the legendary wine king – into giving so much of his precious time and wisdom to the Humpty Dumpty Foundation?
James Halliday’s impact has been breathtaking. He’s become one of Humpty’s greatest friends.
I accept that the Humpty Founder is a silver-tongued devil and pretty persuasive. No question.
But how did he win over James Halliday?
For years, Australian charities have wanted a slice of Mr Halliday’s impeccable brand name.
I suspect that if James was given a bottle of Grange every time he’s been asked, his stockpile would be bigger than Penfolds’ Cellar Door at Nuriootpa.
Fortunately, in a previous life he was a highly successful corporate lawyer. James knows how to politely say “No."
In demand as a prolific writer, vigneron and international wine judge, life was much too busy for the man long regarded as “the greatest champion of the Australian wine industry." With all the accolades goes enormous responsibility, which he takes seriously.
Over the years, I have found talking about wines with James is like talking cricket with Sir Donald Bradman. The best thing is to shut up and listen – rather than make a fool of yourself by offering opinions.
James is a certain kind of man. Literally.
He told me once, he could sit with a great Pinot Noir for fifteen minutes – aged, with a full bouquet – without drinking a drop, “just gently enjoying the nose." He was serious, too.
About two decades ago, Paul Francis decided that Humpty Dinners needed some truly fine wines to go with the really fine food which had become a signature of our big fundraising events. Paul admits that – at the time – he knew nothing about wines, especially what constituted a “truly fine wine.”
So, having never met James but having read his latest Wine Companion – on the spur of the moment – he rang Coldstream Wines in the Yarra Valley.
Mr Halliday answered the phone.
Inexplicably, after he’d stopped laughing at the naivety of the request, James agreed to put Paul in touch with a few prominent vineyards.
The rest – as they say – is Humpty Dumpty history.
Since that initial phone call in 2005, James Halliday has become a Humpty believer and ambassador. He’s hosted countless Grand Wine Tasting nights in Sydney, raising hundreds of thousands of dollars each time – along with the occasional weekend soirees, wandering through his beautiful grapevines and exquisite cellar in the Yarra Valley.
Altogether, James has now raised about eight million dollars to help the Humpty Dumpty Foundation.
Eight million dollars, can you believe that?
He’s also used his industry contacts to freely provide a thousand bottles of Australia’s best wine every year for Humpty’s fundraising auctions and events. You can’t put a price on that.
You can only imagine what a huge difference James’ generosity has made to hospitals across Australia, along with the lives of sick children and their families.
We’re all indebted to 86-year-old James Halliday AM. What a marvellous Humpty friend, indeed.
Truly a great Australian.
James Halliday AM
Raising Good Eggs: How Families Build Legacies Through Giving
By Ross Greenwood
Australians are generous people. Each year we donate more than $14 billion to charities across the country - a testament to the deep spirit of care and community that runs through our nation. Because giving strengthens society, the Government recognises this generosity by allowing most charitable donations to be tax deductible.
Charitable donations, historically, rise as people age. Part of this is practical - through bequests or gifts to organisations that have made a difference in their lives or their families’ lives. But an increasingly common theme is emerging -families are starting to donate sooner in their lives, especially as a lesson to children to encourage donation. When families involve their children in conversations about where to donate, when they encourage them to learn about different causes and understand their impact, it builds a lasting bond between the family and the communities they support.
Learning to give, and to be compassionate, is an important lesson that creates a ripple effect of kindness that stretches far and wide. The matriarch of a well-known Australian family once explained this to me - a families’ responsibility is to teach children to give, and to be involved in the places that they donate. As she, roughly, put it to me: “How can we give a 25 or 27-year-old $30 million and tell them to enjoy their lives? Where does that lead them? Far better that we have taught them to give some of the income of that money away … and to be involved. Their lives will be much more worthwhile.”
The lesson is a powerful reminder that generosity and compassion are gifts that enrich not just the lives of recipients, but also of those who give - no matter their circumstances.
Among the many incredible organisations Australians support, Humpty’s work in delivering lifesaving medical equipment to sick children across Australia is both vital and inspiring. It’s a charity whose mission is easy to understand, and whose impact is felt deeply by countless families.
And so to the rules of charitable giving - there are four conditions your donation must meet to be tax deductible.
1. The organisation you donate to must have status as a Deductible Gift Recipient (DGR). The Humpty Dumpty Foundation has DGR 1 status.
2. It must truly be a gift or donation – that is, you are voluntarily transferring money or property without receiving, or expecting to receive, any material benefit or advantage in return. A material benefit is something that has a monetary value.
3. The donation must be money or property – this can include financial assets such as shares.
4. It must comply with any relevant gift conditions –for some DGRs, the income tax law adds conditions affecting the types of deductible gifts they can receive.
We know times are tough for many families, and every household is feeling the pinch of rising living costs. But if you’re in a position to give, your generosity makes a genuine difference. So don’t be shy. Find a cause that speaks to your heart. Learn about the incredible work of charities like Humpty. And if you can, experience the joy of giving - knowing that your gift, no matter the size, helps build a stronger, kinder Australia.
Humpty’s End of Financial Year Appeal
Help Humpty to help sick kids in hospital by donating to Humpty’s End of Financial Year Appeal. Your tax deductible donation will help Humpty continue to provide urgently needed lifesaving medical equipment and services to hospitals and health services across Australia.
1.Use your camera to hover over the QR code below.
2.Click the link that appears and follow prompts to donate. or Please donate at humpty.org.au/donate
Help fulfil Humpty’s wish to ensure every Australian child has access to the healthcare they need, no matter where they live.
A New Brilliant Device to Help NICU Babies and Their Parents
By Maggie Dent
Some babies come into the world close to their due date, healthy and able to be cared for close to their homes within their communities. Then there are those who arrive unexpectedly early and who need to be cared for in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) that are often a long way from their home, especially rural families. Being separated from a newborn baby has to be one of the most difficult, and challenging experiences that any parent can endure.
This is what happened to Joelene and Jake Grace from Forbes in New South Wales.
Their youngest child, a baby girl called Indi May Grace, had an extraordinary start to life when she was born at 31 weeks gestation, midair on a Royal Flying Doctor Service RFDS plane, en route to Sydney. Joelene and Indi were immediately taken to the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (RPAH) in Sydney to be placed in the NICU - for careful neonatal intensive care for the first three weeks of her life.
Not only was Joelene very concerned about baby Indi she had to leave her precious three sons behind without an opportunity to say goodbye. This was such a worrying and stressful time for Joelene especially.
"I remember crying before being transferred onto the plane not knowing how long I would be away from my 5yr, 3yr and 1yr old sons.
That day was also my eldest son’s 5th birthday, which added another layer of mum guilt to the bag!"
Even though Joelene and Jake were close to the hospital just a couple of suburbs away, the couple did not have a car in Sydney and it was really difficult to rely on public transport to travel to and from the hospital.
Like many of the mothers of babies in NICU due to early arrival babies, expressing breastmilk every three hours is an important part of supporting these precious little babies. The Humpty Dumpty Foundation has been providing specialised breast pumps to support mothers who find themselves in this situation. I proudly donated one to the Broome Hospital in Western Australia in 2024.
Given that Joelene and Jake were unable to be with Indi in the RPAH NICU full time Joelene became even more distressed.
"I
felt a lot of things - initially helpless and guilty. Given that I had had three healthy babies prior to Indi, I struggled with not being the one to breastfeed her, change her and look after her 24/7 like I did with my boys.
Jake and Joelene Grace with Baby Indi
Baby Indi in the NICU at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital
If
my husband or myself were not by her side during that first week, the guilt was huge and it felt like a very unnatural beginning for us. I had my guard on a lot of the time, preparing for bad news especially in that first week. We
really had no idea what we were in for with her medical situation."
Thankfully, the Humpty Dumpty Foundation donated an AngelEye camera system to Joelene so that she could see her precious baby from a distance. Joelene explained how comforting it was to be able to see Indi’s little movements through the live feed and to be able to observe the gentle care of the nurses. Being able to watch her helped soothe her anxiety and gave both her and Jake much needed reassurance and mental comfort that Indi was in good hands getting the specialised care she needed.
"I could watch her on my phone as she went to sleep and she was the first thing I checked when I woke up. I do feel this small addition in our journey was such a huge tool for me in managing my own mental health at the time.
However,slowlywithreassurancefromouramazingmedical team, my husband, and of course Indi showing us what a fighter she was, I began to feel more settled and hopeful that the road ahead would be smooth sailing."
The AngelEye cameras have been helpful in other ways too. The Royal Brisbane & Women's Hospital has a large NICU that accepts babies from across Queensland. The hospital cares for many families where English is not their first language, so having access to the AngelEye Camera is crucial because it will allow medical staff to communicate with parents in over 100 different languages to mitigate the language barrier.
Further, when parents are unable to visit their sick babies when they are infectious, this wonderful equipment allows them to still share special moments with their babies and young children in care.
Indi spent three weeks in the RPA NICU before the family could move closer to their home. Indi then spent another two weeks in the Orange special care nursery before she was finally able to go home - five weeks after her birth. Once they were transferred to Orange, Joelene and Jake and the boys could stay at the Ronald McDonald House which made being together as a family so much easier
Thanks to the Humpty Dumpty Foundation little Indi is now one, and happy and thriving. Joelene speaks with deep emotion and gratitude about how vital the Humptydonated equipment was - not just in Indi’s survival, but in supporting her and Jake emotionally during an incredibly isolating time.
Joelene, Jake and their boys visiting baby Indi in hospital
Humpty’s Tangible Impact: Transforming Healthcare for Kids Across Australia
A message from Assoc. Professor Kath Browning Carmo
Humpty Board Director and Chair Medical Programs Advisory Committee (MPAC)
Every day across Australia, thousands of infants and children face critical health challengeswhether through sudden emergencies, acute illness, or ongoing treatment for chronic conditions. In these moments, access to the right medical equipment can mean the difference between life and death.
The Humpty Medical Programs Advisory Committee has reviewed equipment requests from health services in every corner of the country. From remote Nhulunbuy and Katherine in the Northern Territory, where patient transport vehicles are urgently needed, to Roxby Downs, a close-knit outback mining community in South Australia that requested an urgently needed open baby warmer. Each of these requests highlights the same pressing reality: hospitals and healthcare teams are stretched, essential equipment often
lies beyond their financial reach, and the need for lifesaving equipment remains constant.
What truly sets Humpty apart is its unwavering commitment to equity - ensuring that every child, no matter where they live, has access to the same high standard of care.
On behalf of the Committee, I extend my heartfelt thanks to everyone who supports Humpty. Your generosity enables hospitals across Australia to give children the best possible chance at a healthy future, regardless of their postcode.
I also want to acknowledge the incredible members of our Committee, their commitment ensures that every equipment request is thoughtfully assessed and directed where it can have the greatest impact.
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A hospital or health service identifies a high priority medical need where equipment can dramatically change or save the life of a sick and injured child. They reach out to Humpty for a helping hand.
Submissions are rigorously assessed by Humpty’s Medical Program Advisory Committee – comprised of senior representatives at the top of their practice in medical and clinical care from across the country.
Approved items are added to Humpty’s Wish List and published at humpty.org.au and showcased to supporters in the hope a “Good Egg" will be able to help and donate.
Humpty orders all donated equipment for delivery directly to the hospitals. There is no middle man.
A donor plaque is affixed to the equipment recognising the generous support of the “Good Egg." Where possible, feedback and photos are shared with the donor.
To grant some of the very special wishes that follow, scan this QR code OR contact Humpty on 1300 486 789 (1300 HUMPTY).
humpty.org.au/wish-list
Founder's Wishes
Humpty plays a crucial role in saving children’s lives every day in Australian hospitals and health services. This is made possible by the generous donations of urgently needed medical equipment.
In consultation with Humpty’s Medical Programs Advisory Committee, we have carefully selected these pieces of equipment because of their urgent need and the vital difference they will make in supporting doctors and nurses to save children’s lives.
FOUNDER'S WISH 1: BILISTICK SYSTEM $8,070 EACH, 4 NEEDED
ECHUCA REGIONAL HEALTH, MATERNITY, VIC WEST GIPPSLAND HOSPITAL, MATERNITY, VIC WA COUNTRY HEALTH SERVICE, MIDWIFERY, WA
SINGLETON HOSPITAL, MATERNITY, NSW
In regional Australia, where access to pathology services and timely diagnostics may be limited, this equipment is vital as it is portable and rechargeable, and enables rapid, bedside jaundice testing, delivering results within minutes. This device supports midwives in making timely clinical decisions, improving health outcomes for sick babies who present to these regional hospitals.
FOUNDER'S WISH 2: INFINITY M540 MONITOR SYSTEM
$16,740 EACH, 3 NEEDED
ROYAL HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN, NEWBORN CARE, NSW
These monitors are a key upgrade for the Royal Hospital for Women’s Newborn Care Unit, ensuring every baby receives continuous, high-quality monitoring. This advanced system integrates seamlessly with the hospital’s IT network, allowing clinicians to track key vital signs in babies, improving safety, reducing risks, and ensuring lifesaving care is always just moments away.
FOUNDER'S WISH 3: ALGO 7I $29,610 EACH, 2 NEEDED
ROYAL DARWIN HOSPITAL, NT HEARING, NT
With many families living in remote and regional areas, consistent access to early hearing assessment is essential. This equipment is desperately needed at Royal Darwin Hospital’s Hearing Department to replace the outdated system currently in use, which is unreliable and limits program reach. By enabling accurate, non-invasive screening shortly after birth, it ensures babies are assessed early - regardless of location - supporting timely diagnosis and intervention. This is a critical step in delivering equitable, high-quality care to newborns across the NT.
FOUNDER'S WISH 4: SENTEC
$30,250 EACH, 2 NEEDED
DIGITAL MONITOR
SUNSHINE HOSPITAL, NEWBORN SERVICES, VIC
ROYAL BRISBANE & WOMEN’S HOSPITAL, NEONATOLOGY, QLD
This monitor tracks important vital signs in sick babies, providing real-time data to healthcare teams. This allows for quick adjustments to treatments like oxygen therapy, ensuring the baby stays stable and safe. By providing continuous, non-invasive monitoring, this helps reduce risks and improves outcomes for newborns in critical care.
FOUNDER'S WISH 5: GIRAFFE OMNIBED CARESTATION
$77,140
THE CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL AT WESTMEAD, GRACE CENTRE FOR NEWBORN INTENSIVE CARE, NSW
The Grace Centre for Newborn Intensive Care cares for over 600 critically ill and premature newborns each year. This advanced bed can function both as an incubator and a radiant warmer, providing the perfect thermal environment to support the fragile health of neonates. Its consistent and uniform heat ensures that babies maintain their body temperature, which is crucial for their growth and recovery. This equipment will significantly improve the care of critically ill infants and support the hospital’s ongoing efforts to provide world-class healthcare to newborns in need.
Central Coast Local Health District, Special Care Nursery (12)
RAD 57 PULSE OXIMETER WITH NEONATAL SENSOR: $2,000
Wollongong Hospital, Midwifery in the Home
ARJO FETAL RATE
DOPPLER: $2,480 EACH
Griffith Hospital, Maternity (3)
NUTRISAFE FEEDING PUMP: $3,100 EACH
Nepean Hospital, Neonatal Unit (3)
NEWBORN ANNE TRAINING MANIKIN:
$5,670
Southern NSW Local Health District, Paediatrics
AGILIA SP MC SYRINGE PUMP SYSTEM WITH STATION: $6,100
Royal North Shore Hospital, NICU
BILILUX LED PHOTOTHERAPY LIGHT: $9,180 EACH
Shoalhaven Hospital, Neonatal Unit (2)
ASTODIA
DIAPHANOSCOPE: $3,480 EACH
Hillston Multipurpose Service, Emergency (1), Hornsby Ku-ring-gai Hospital, Special Care Nursery (1), Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, NICU (2), South East Regional Hospital (Bega), Maternity (1), The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Grace Centre for Newborn Intensive Care (4)
GIRAFFE LIGHTMETER:
$4,330
Bowral Hospital, Special Care Nursery
AIRVO 3 HUMIDIFIER SYSTEM: $10,760 EACH
Canterbury Hospital, Emergency (2), Canterbury Hospital, Paediatrics (2), Gosford Hospital, Paediatrics (1), Liverpool Hospital, Emergency (2), South Western Sydney Local Health District, Paediatrics (2), Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, Emergency (2), Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, NICU (4), Sydney Children's Hospital, Randwick, Isolation Unit (5)
JM-105 JAUNDICE METER: $11,120 EACH
Hornsby Ku-ring-gai Hospital, Special Care Nursery (2), Westmead Hospital, Midwifery (1), South Western Sydney Local Health District, Emergency (1), Canterbury Hospital, Emergency (1), Goulburn Hospital, Maternity (1)
New South Wales
BILISOFT LED PHOTOTHERAPY SYSTEM (WITHOUT STAND):
$13,380 EACH
Ryde Hospital Emergency (1), Shoalhaven Hospital, Neonatal Unit (2), Wollongong Hospital Neonatal Unit (2)
BILICOCOON NEST SYSTEM: $14,600 EACH
The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Grace Centre for Newborn Intensive Care (2)
The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Grace Centre for Newborn Intensive Care
BABYROO TN300: $60,100
Canterbury Hospital, Postnatal Ward
BABYLOG VN800 NEONATAL VENTILATOR: $84,400
The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Grace Centre for Newborn Intensive Care
Humpty Donors have the ability to add their name or brand name to the plaque that gets affixed to every single piece of donated equipment.
Victoria
CALESCA MILK WARMING
DEVICE: $1,730 EACH
The Northern Hospital, Special Care Nursery (5)
RAD 57 PULSE OXIMETER WITH PAEDIATRIC SENSOR: $2,000
Barwon Health North, Urgent Care
EZ-IO DRILL & EDUCATOR
KIT: $2,910 EACH
Otway Health & Community Services, Urgent Care (1), Royal Women's Hospital, NICU (1)
ASTODIA DIAPHANOSCOPE:
$3,480 EACH
Royal Women's Hospital, NICU (1),
The Northern Hospital, Special Care Nursery (1), Children's Hospital, Hospital at Home Service (1)
VIVA PAEDIATRIC EMERGENCY CART: $4,800 EACH
South West Healthcare, Urgent Care (1), Bairnsdale Regional Health Service, Maternity (1)
CONNEX VITAL SIGNS MONITOR WITH STAND:
$8,330 EACH
Frankston Hospital, Emergency (2)
BILILUX LED PHOTOTHERAPY LIGHT:
$9,180 EACH
Grampians Health Ballarat, Special Care Nursery (2)
AIRVO 3 HUMIDIFIER SYSTEM: $10,760
The Northern Hospital, Child & Adolescent Unit
JM-105 JAUNDICE METER:
$11,120 EACH
The Northern Hospital, Special Care Nursery (1), Box Hill Hospital Postnatal Home Visiting Service (2), Gippsland Southern Health Service, Maternity (1), Monash Children's Hospital, at Home Service (1), Royal Women's Hospital, NICU (1), The Kilmore & District Hospital, Maternity (1)
BILISOFT LED PHOTOTHERAPY SYSTEM (WITH STAND):
$15,370 EACH
Goulburn Valley Health, Maternity (2)
SENTEC DIGITAL MONITOR: $30,250 EACH
Sunshine Hospital, Newborn Services (2)
ISOLETTE 8000 PLUS STANDARD SCN:
$42,070 EACH
Box Hill Hospital, Special Care Nursery (3)
ARCTIC SUN TEMPERATURE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM:
$54,450 EACH
Mercy Hospital For Women, NICU (2)
Humpty Donors have the ability to add their name or brand name to the plaque that gets affixed to every single piece of donated equipment.
Queensland
CALESCA MILK WARMING DEVICE: $1,730 EACH
Mount Isa Base Hospital, Paediatrics (3)
RAD G PULSE OXIMETER WITH NEONATAL SENSOR:
$1,870 EACH
Hervey Bay Hospital, Special Care Nursery (3)
SYMPHONY BREAST PUMP WITH CASE: $3,180
Queensland Children's Hospital, Newborn Care
ASTODIA DIAPHANOSCOPE:
$3,480 EACH
Redland Hospital, Special Care Nursery
SYMPHONY BREAST PUMP WITH STAND: $3,550 EACH
Redland Hospital, Special Care Nursery (1), Caboolture Hospital, Maternity (3)
PREMATURE ANNE TASK TRAINER: $6,500
Royal Flying Doctor Service QLD, Aeromedical
JM-105 JAUNDICE METER:
$11,120 EACH
Gympie Hospital, Maternity and Paediatric
BILICOCOON PHOTOTHERAPY BAG:
$13,830
Ipswich Hospital, Children's Ward
BILISOFT LED PHOTOTHERAPY SYSTEM (WITHOUT STAND):
$13,380 EACH
Caboolture Hospital, Paediatrics (3)
SENTEC DIGITAL MONITOR: $30,250 EACH
Royal Brisbane & Women's Hospital, Neonatology (2)
GIRAFFE WARMER:
$48,320
Hervey Bay Hospital, Paediatrics
PANDA WARMER RESUSVIEW: $48,900
Hervey Bay Hospital, Special Care Nursery
Northern Territory
HEMOCUE HB 801
ANALYSER: $2,560 EACH
Alice Springs Hospital, Central Region
Public & Primary Care (17), Royal Darwin Hospital, PPHC Top End (18), Red Lily Health Board, Remote Health (1)
EZ-IO DRILL & EDUCATOR
KIT: $2,910
Red Lily Health Board, Remote Health
VIVA PAEDIATRIC
EMERGENCY CART:
$4,800 EACH
Red Lily Health Board Primary Health (1), Pintupi Homelands Health Service Aboriginal Corporation, Primary Health (1)
CONNEX VITAL SIGNS
MONITOR WITH STAND:
$8,330 EACH
Sunshine Hospital, Newborn Services (2)
PANDA RESUSVIEW
WARMER WITH UPS:
$56,690
Royal Darwin Hospital, Delivery Suite 6B
BABYLOG VN600 NEONATAL VENTILATOR:
$74,840
Royal Darwin Hospital, NICU
MR1 HAMILTON VENTILATOR: $90,270
Royal Darwin Hospital, NICU
Tasmania
SYMPHONY BREAST PUMP WITH STAND: $3,550 EACH
Royal Hobart Hospital, NICU (4)
BILISOFT LED PHOTOTHERAPY SYSTEM (WITHOUT STAND):
$13,380 EACH
North West Regional Hospital, Special Care Nursery (2)
NEOPUFF RESUSCITATION
DEVICE: $2,420
North Canberra Hospital, Special Care Nursery
BILILUX LED PHOTOTHERAPY LIGHT:
$9,180 EACH
North Canberra Hospital, Special Care Nursery (2)
GIRAFFE OMNIBED CARESTATION: $77,140
North Canberra Hospital, Special Care Nursery
South Australia
MICRO-PREMMIE
SIMULATOR: $1,410
Women's and Children's Hospital, Maternity Services
NEOPUFF RESUSCITATION DEVICE: $2,420
Women's and Children's Hospital, NICU
SYMPHONY BREAST PUMP WITH CASE: $3,180 EACH
Flinders Medical Centre, Paediatrics (1), Flinders Medical Centre, Neonatal Unit (4), Riverland General Hospital, Maternity (1)
SYMPHONY BREAST PUMP WITH STAND: $3,550 EACH
Mount Gambier and Districts Health Service, Maternity & Paediatrics (1), Women's and Children's Hospital, NICU (2), Port Augusta Hospital and Regional Health Services, Casuarina Ward (1)
VIVA PAEDIATRIC
EMERGENCY CART: $4,800
Burra Hospital, Emergency
NEWBORN ANNE TRAINING MANIKIN: $5,670
Women's and Children's Hospital, Maternity Services
Whyalla Hospital and Health Services, Maternity (2), Port Augusta Hospital and Regional Health Services, Casuarina Ward (1)
BILISOFT LED PHOTOTHERAPY SYSTEM (WITHOUT STAND): $13,380 EACH
Flinders Medical Centre, Neonatal Unit & Maternity Outreach (2)
BILISOFT LED PHOTOTHERAPY SYSTEM (WITH STAND): $15,370
Port Augusta Hospital and Regional Health Services, Casuarina Ward
BABYROO TN300: $60,100
Riverland General Hospital, Midwifery
The cost of the medical equipment as published by the Humpty Dumpty Foundation is an accurate estimate of the list price at the time of publication. It also includes an allowance for handling costs, delivery, handover costs and a plaque to acknowledge the donor. The actual cost of equipment may be different at the time of purchase. Any shortfall in the cost of the equipment will be paid by the Humpty Dumpty Foundation, any surplus will be treated as a donation and will be used to financially support the Foundation. Humpty will contact you to discuss alternatives if the selected item of medical equipment is unavailable or no longer needed by the stated hospital. In the unlikely event that an alternative replacement cannot be found to your satisfaction, then Humpty will refund the amount paid.
Western Australia
EZ-IO DRILL & EDUCATOR KIT: $2,910
Armadale-Kelmscott Memorial Hospital, Education
SYMPHONY BREAST PUMP WITH CASE: $3,180 EACH
Fiona Stanley Hospital, NICU (4), Armadale-Kelmscott Memorial Hospital, Neonatal Unit (2)
IMPACTED FETAL HEAD:
$3,480 EACH
WA Country Health Service, Midwifery (8)
VIVA PAEDIATRIC EMERGENCY CART: $4,800
Fiona Stanley Hospital, Emergency
950 HUMIDIFICATION SYSTEM: $5,000
Fiona Stanley Hospital, NICU
BILISTICK SYSTEM 2.0:
$8,070 EACH
WA Country Health Service, Midwifery (4)
CONNEX VITAL SIGNS
MONITOR WITH STAND:
$8,330
Bunbury Hospital, Paediatrics
JM-105 JAUNDICE METER: $11,120
Fiona Stanley Hospital, Emergency
NEOVIEW VIDEO
LARYNGOSCOPE: $12,300
Fiona Stanley Hospital, NICU
AIRVO 3 HUMIDIFIER
SYSTEM: $10,760 EACH
Fiona Stanley Hospital, NICU (1), Joondalup Health Campus, Paediatric Emergency (1)
Special project
X SERIES DEFIBRILLATOR $50,830
PERTH CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL, NETS, WA
Newborn Emergency Transport Service of WA (NETS WA) transports approximately 1,200 sick newborns each year, sometimes over distances of up to 2,500 kilometres, playing a vital role in ensuring babies receive timely access to intensive care in Perth. This equipment will provide NETS WA with advanced, reliable monitoring and defibrillation capabilities during neonatal retrievals across the state, standardising care with a device consistent with neonatal units, improving confidence and efficiency during critical moments. This equipment also allows real-time ECG viewing by on-call NETS consultants or cardiologists, enabling timely clinical support from specialists throughout the retrieval journey.
Showcasing Humpty
Over the years, Humpty has made an extraordinary difference to the lives of sick children in hospital, bringing hope and joy when it is needed most. We’ve gathered some of our favourite memories to share the incredible impact of Humpty’s work with you.
Pumped For Life: Celebrate Your Mum By Helping A New One
About Us: Humpty's Impact Across Australia
Dream Big Little Man: Benson's Story
The Heartbeat Behind Run Baby Run: Archie's Story
First-hand Look At Humpty's Impact: With Johanna Griggs AM
As we navigate these challenging times across Australia, we recognise that many sectors, including healthcare, are under significant pressure. The ongoing cost-of-living crisis has a profound impact on the giving capabilities of individuals and businesses, both large and small.
We understand that, in these circumstances, each charitable decision is made with careful consideration. It is not always easy to determine where your support will have the greatest and most enduring impact.
I want to reassure you that Humpty’s commitment remains dedicated to strengthening public health systems so that every Australian child has access to quality healthcare, no matter where they live.
This year, we celebrate 35 years of fundraising—an extraordinary milestone made possible by the vision of our Founder, Paul Francis OAM, our Board and the selfless contribution of many others in the advancement of health and care for Australian children.
Over these three and a half decades, we have grown to become the largest charitable supplier of medical equipment and health services for children, alongside both state and territory governments across the country.
Our legacy of fundraising and our unwavering dedication to supporting hospitals and health services throughout Australia have solidified our position as a trusted leader in advancing healthcare for children.
In the past year alone, together, we donated 494 pieces of children’s medical equipment and health initiative programs to support children in hospital.
More than half of this vital equipment was delivered directly to Neonatal and Maternity Units, providing vulnerable babies with the critical support they need from the very first breath. These are moments where every second matters—and having the right equipment available can truly make the difference between life and loss.
CEO's Message
Two-thirds of last year’s donations went to rural and remote communities. The impact of this equipment cannot be overstated; it helps reduce separation anxiety and keeps families together. For children in these areas, having access to the right equipment close to home means they can receive care locally, without the stress and uncertainty of being transferred to larger facilities. While the emotional impact of this is immeasurable, we know that it makes a significant difference in the lives of these families.
Our broad national reach, supporting over 500 hospitals and health services, ensures that your generosity as a corporate supporter or donor is felt where it matters most—within your community. By partnering with Humpty, we can work together to create better health outcomes and bring essential care closer to home.
With our extensive network and unmatched ability to deliver tangible results, we are uniquely positioned to ensure that the most urgent medical needs are met swiftly, creating life-changing outcomes for children across Australia.
The success of Humpty over the last 35 years is a direct result of the support from our incredible community of Good Eggs. From our dedicated team to the generous volunteers, and our frontline workers who witness firsthand the impact of our work, each contribution reminds us of the profound difference we make together. It is a true privilege for all of us to see the kindness of Australians who choose to support Humpty and sustain long-term change for children in need.
Thank you for joining us on this journey. Your support empowers the Humpty Dumpty Foundation to continue offering hope to families when they need it most.
Claire Reaney CEO & Managing Director
2024 Year in Review
The Humpty Dumpty Foundation is the largest charitable supplier of children’s medical equipment and health initiatives behind State and Territory Governments across Australia. donated towards medical equipment and health initiatives for sick kids in hospital
494 of equipment donated into Neonatal and Maternity Units – saving lives from their first breaths 55%
$6.1 million of equipment donated to rural and remote communities pieces of medical equipment donated nationwide
7,600 donations from our Humpty Good Egg community of public hospitals and health services with paediatric and maternity services supported nationwide 88% 2/3 public hospitals & health services supported across Australia 505
over
Humpty's Outcomes
Having access to state-of-the-art equipment dramatically increases positive health outcomes Reducing separation & anxiety for kids & their loved ones
Heartbeats of Hope: Humpty’s Impact across Queensland
By Sharyn Ghidella
In a state as vast as Queensland, where dirt roads stretch for hours and cities buzz with growing families, one truth remains: every baby and child deserves the very best start in life. Yet for too many, geography and lack of essential equipment can stand in the way of timely, essential medical care. Delivering that care, whether in a remote outback clinic or a busy city ward, takes dedication, compassion, and the right equipment in the right hands.
Thanks to the generosity of its supporters, the Humpty Dumpty Foundation has become a quiet force behind countless lifesaving moments.
For 16 years, Humpty has been helping to bridge the healthcare gap across Queensland, donating urgently needed and often lifesaving medical equipment that empowers clinicians and creates a lifesaving impact for the state’s youngest patients.
Over these years, the Foundation has supported 89 hospitals and health services across Queensland - from coastal hubs to tiny rural communities. In each setting, Humpty’s goal is the same: to give every child, no matter where they live, access to the healthcare they need, when they need it.
In outback Queensland, where access to specialist care often depends on the arrival of a plane, the Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) is more than a medical providerit’s a lifeline. And for the newborns they care for, time is everything.
To strengthen emergency neonatal care, the RFDS now uses the Newborn Anne Training Manikin - an incredibly lifelike simulator that helps clinicians practise the critical procedures needed in the first minutes of a baby’s life.
Nurse from Ipswich Hospital with pulse oximeter donated by a generous Humpty supporter
The Royal Flying Doctors with their Newborn Anne Training Manikin donated by a generous Humpty
Donated by a generous Humpty supporter, the manikin allows RFDS doctors, nurses, and nurse practitioners to refine essential skills like managing airways, helping babies breathe, and inserting medical tubes. This manikin is also used during joint training days with Queensland Ambulance Service Flight Paramedics and LifeFlight teams, creating a strong, coordinated response across all state emergency services. For the babies whose lives may depend on the skills of these medical professionals, this training makes all the difference.
This is just one example of Humpty’s powerful impact in regional and remote communities. In fact, 567 of the 698 pieces of equipment donated across Queensland have gone to hospitals in rural or remote areas, accounting for an incredible 81% of Humpty’s contributions in the state. These donations help save little lives and give doctors and nurses the tools they need to act with speed and confidence and offer families a sense of comfort amid crises.
And Humpty’s work doesn’t stop at the edge of the outback. In city hospitals, the Foundation’s support is just as meaningful. At Ipswich Hospital, located about 40 kilometres west of Brisbane, a pulse oximeter, a device that measures a baby's blood oxygen levels and heart rate, is now helping staff in the Children’s Sunshine Ward assess the respiratory and cardiovascular health of their young patients more closely.
As noted by Paediatric Clinical Nurse Consultant, Eme Greene:
“Your support plays a crucial role in ensuring that we can continue to provide the highest standard of care. This equipment will significantly aid in monitoring vital signs and improving health outcomes for the children in our care… We are so fortunate to have your support.”
First-hand accounts like this reflect the true heart of Humpty’s mission to raise funds to provide essential and often lifesaving medical equipment to help sick kids in hospitals across Australia. Thanks to the kindness of individuals, community groups, and businesses, Humpty aims to provide medical teams the equipment they need to care for sick children with the precision, speed, and compassion they deserve. From metropolitan hospitals to remote airstrips, every piece of equipment tells a story of hope.
Altogether, 698 pieces of medical equipment worth $4.9 million has been donated to Queensland hospitals and health services by Humpty and its community of supporters. However, Humpty’s equipment donations are so much more than numbers on a page. They’re the quiet hum of a monitor catching a child’s first breath. They’re the steady hands of a nurse in a high-stakes moment. They’re the sigh of relief from a parent who knows their child is in safe hands. These are the heartbeats of hope that Humpty brings to life across Queensland - not just through equipment, but through connection, community, and care.
With every monitor, manikin, and oximeter delivered, Humpty helps write a new chapter for children and babies across the Sunshine State. Aiming to ensure no child is too far away to receive the care they need, no family faces illness alone, and every heartbeat has the chance to grow stronger.
Nursing staff holding a Bilistick System donated by a generous Humpty supporter
From Darwin to Tennant Creek to Alice Springs: How Humpty is Transforming Healthcare Across the NT
By Johanna Griggs
Recently, the Humpty Dumpty Foundation Founder Paul Francis and I were lucky enough to tour through the Northern Territory.
A huge amount of work has been undertaken by Humpty since Paul and Ray Martin first ventured up to the NT in 2017. Over 920 pieces of equipment in 72 hospitals and health services are now making an enormous difference to the lives of so many. The NT is a magical place to visit, but the vastness of its geographic spread and the isolation that it creates throws up many unique challenges.
The infant mortality rate is nearly 3 times that of any other state or territory in the country.
To quote the NT’s Chief Procurement Officer Will Monaghan, "It’s effectively a 700 bed health system spread over a space that’s twice as big as Texas. That’s bigger than France, Germany, the UK and Ireland put together… servicing a population of just under 250,000 people."
AM
We cannot express enough how grateful we are for the incredible support we received from the NT Government, through Will, Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro, Health Minister Steve Edgington and their teams who helped make our trip absolutely seamless.
Here are just some of the people we met and the things that we will be thinking about for a long time to come:
Royal Darwin Hospital Neonatologist and Paediatrician
Dr Mantho Kgosiemang - "We support new life from 24 weeks here, and those babies obviously are very small to live outside of their mother’s womb, so we have equipment here that pretends to be a uterus. We have a humidicrib that can maintain humidity up to 80% so it can simulate that intra-uterine warm and moist environment for babies. It was donated by Humpty.
Three out of the five ventilators have been donated by Humpty and almost all of them are at the end of their life. We need to upgrade them. Technology has moved on so much. It operates at a much more sophisticated level that is able to support small babies better.
Johanna and Paul with the incredible Tennant Creek Hospital staff
We
are optimistic and hopeful that the community can rally around our services again like they have in the past.
We are also standing next to another lifesaving piece of equipment (Artic Sun). When babies are born having experienced birth asphyxia where they have had reduced oxygen supply to their brain and have fissures of brain damage – we are able to cool their core temperature down to 33 degrees (instead of the usual 36/37 degrees). Science and research has shown us that babies who would have ended up with cerebral palsy for example, whose outcome may have been a lifetime in care, a child that would be wheelchair bound, and require assistance from the government for the rest of their lives… we can use this machine for three days to halt the progression of the brain damage and turn things around. You go from a baby that would have required a wheelchair, deaf, blind and not able to feed themselves to a child who attends school and has language. This here is a life altering piece of equipment that again came donated through Humpty’s donors - so thank you."
Tennant Creek Hospital Senior Nurse Mary Williams –Former Telstra Businesswoman of The Year and Nurse of the Year, who has been working on and off at Tennant Creek Hospital (TCH) for over 30 years. TCH services an area of 240,000km2 and she estimates over 80% of their work is with First Nations people.
Mary recalled the days when TCH only had one cardiac monitor, one ventilator, and patients relied heavily on the medical staff’s clinical training…
"These days it’s amazing seeing the success rates with the new pieces of equipment, as you actually see children getting better before your eyes. We now have equipment that we never thought in a million years we’d have.
We’ve got this great organisation, with so many people who don’t even know us
that help
out a tiny hospital in the middle of nowhere.
They help our community and our wonderful, dedicated staff, and from a nurse who works remotely – it’s everything you could ever imagine to actually know you’ve got the stuff you need to do your job well."
Alice Springs Hospital Neonatal Unit Manager Karen Miegel
- "Hot off the press are our two new Giraffe OmniBeds donated by Humpty donors. These are incubators where the lid comes up and down, to give us easy access to a baby. When the lid is all the way up a heater automatically kicks in to keep the babies warm. And when it’s down we can control the humidity. We can adjust the height of the whole cot. We can either work through the port holes at the sides, or if we need to (which we often do) we can quickly and efficiently pull the sides down for easier access. We have X-ray capabilities, and the cot can be angled around, or tilted up or down at either end. From an early baby perspective – we don’t want to handle them too much. We don’t want to be picking them up and moving them all the time because that makes them really unstable. So, the beauty of all these features is the baby just stays snug and still and we can shift the machine around to move them where we want them to be to give them the very best chance of recovery."
Humpty has now raised over $9 million and provided over 900 pieces of equipment in total for 90% hospitals and health services across the NT. However, the Territory still needs our help. If you are in a position to help, please take a look at Humpty's Wish List on pages 13-20.
NT Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro and Health Minister Steve Edgington helped make Johanna and Paul's trip seamless
"'Out heartfelt thanks to Humpty and its generous supporters from the nursing and medical staff at Great Ocean Road Health Urgent Care Unit. Your donation of the EZ-IO drill and educator kit will enable us to complete practical training with staff to confidently use the EZ-IO clinically when required. This will improve patient outcomes greatly."
Karen Stewart Acting Nurse Unit Manager, Otway Health
and Community Services, VIC
"Your generosity is truly making a positive impact on the care we provide. The recent donation of the pulse oximeter to the Children's Sunshine Ward within the Ipswich Hospital will enhance our ability to monitor the health of our young patients more effectively, ensuring that we can deliver the best possible care during their time with us."
"Specialised retrieval services are at least 3 – 4 hours away, so we need to be equipped to care for and manage patients safely until that help arrives. We would like to express our immense thanks and gratitude for the recent donation of the BabyRoo infant resuscitation cot. Having this specialised equipment available locally makes the safe care and treatment of precious babies that much easier."
Janine Connell Executive Officer/Director of Nursing, Roxby Downs Health Service, SA
Humpty Dumpty Foundation
Phone: 1300 486 789 (1300 HUMPTY)
Email: humpty@humpty.com.au
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