Couple put child organ donation ‘in the spotlight’ with 230 handmade dolls

Katie and Graham Tatham have created a campaign to highlight the 230 children in the UK waiting for an organ transplant.
The Waiting To Live campaign will see 230 dolls placed in children’s hospitals and other key locations to highlight the more than 230 children waiting for an organ transplant (Katie Tatham/Julian Ward/PA)
Hannah Cottrell21 November 2023

Parents of a three-year-old waiting for a multi-organ transplant have created a campaign to place 230 dolls in children’s hospitals around the country, representing more than 230 UK children awaiting organ donation.

The handmade dolls, which have been tailored to look like each child, will wear a badge inviting passers-by to scan a QR code so they can listen to audio recordings of real children telling their stories of needing an organ transplant.

The campaign, Waiting To Live, is the brainchild of Katie and Graham Tatham, both 35, from London, whose son Ralph was diagnosed with liver cancer in January and needs a liver, bowel and pancreas transplant after the disease spread.

Ralph was initially going to have a partial liver donation from his father but Mrs Tatham said the cancer became “too extensive in his veins” and a multi-organ transplant “is his only chance of survival”.

“It was a huge shock because he didn’t really have any symptoms other than a swollen tummy,” Mrs Tatham told the PA news agency.

“It’s the worst thing that could ever happen to you. I couldn’t think of anything worse to be going through.

“It’s a situation where you don’t really know how to feel because you don’t know how the future is going to pan out and you have to stay hopeful and positive for your son.”

Many children waiting for organs such as a heart, lungs or bowel are reliant on a transplant from another child in order for the organ to be the right size and strength for what their body needs.

“It’s been six months of hell, torture, because we know how rare these organs are and specifically his requirement for organs is magnitudes rarer because it needs to be from a similar-sized child,” Mr Tatham said.

The couple started putting plans in motion for the Waiting To Live campaign in May after feeling “helpless” with the news Ralph needs a multi-organ transplant.

Helped by the marketing agency Wunderman Thompson UK, for whom Mrs Tatham works, and a multitude of craftsmen and suppliers across the country, the campaign has been pulled together in the space of a few months, a feat the couple said is “incredible”.

Four of the dolls, including one for Ralph, will be placed in Great Ormond Street Hospital, central London, which has supported the Waiting To Live campaign and where many of the children involved get care.

“For someone to give organs, it’s an incredibly courageous and precious thing to do and this campaign is about making people consider it in advance,” Mrs Tatham said.

“If you are in that position, you have the chance to save another child’s life, or even many children’s lives, and I think it’s about realising how important and special that gift is.

“We want this to be a positive thing and hopefully encourage people to consider organ donation as something wonderful to do.”

The couple also hope the campaign will “normalise” the conversation around child organ donation.

The hope is, if nothing else, there are lives saved at the end of the day

Graham Tatham

Mrs Tatham said: “If you were in the absolute worst situation, there is one small thing that might give you some comfort and save another child’s life.”

Mr Tatham said they “took a lot of comfort” in knowing the other 230 families around the UK “would be able to see such a fantastic campaign go live” and see child organ donation “in the spotlight”.

“The hope is, if nothing else, there are lives saved at the end of the day,” he said.

Jodie Woolford, 32, whose two-year-old daughter Amelia has been waiting for a heart transplant for more than a year, told PA she takes “comfort” in her family’s involvement in the Waiting To Live campaign.

“It’s comforting to know that there’s families like me. It’s comforting to know that Amelia’s not the only child but it’s so sad,” she said.

“It’s heart-breaking to know that there’s 200-odd children waiting for a donor.”

Ms Woolford said her daughter can only take a heart from a child who is up to the age of eight because she requires a similar-sized organ donor.

“It’s been a rollercoaster,” she said. “It’s been ups and downs.”

She said she “never thought about organ donation” until she was put into this situation and now her family, including her 10-month-old daughter Blossom, are on the NHS organ donor register.

“Sometimes there’s just not enough awareness about it. People are not talking and they don’t want to make the decision on the spot,” she said.

“It’s just being aware that there are other children out there that are waiting for these organs.

“Your loss can be somebody else’s gift.”

Create a FREE account to continue reading

eros

Registration is a free and easy way to support our journalism.

Join our community where you can: comment on stories; sign up to newsletters; enter competitions and access content on our app.

Your email address

Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number

You must be at least 18 years old to create an account

* Required fields

Already have an account? SIGN IN

By clicking Create Account you confirm that your data has been entered correctly and you have read and agree to our Terms of use , Cookie policy and Privacy policy .

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged in