Meet our Team
Royal Brompton and Harefield hospitals make up the largest specialist heart and lung centre in the UK and among the largest in Europe.
Meet our Team
Our Trustee Board have unrivalled knowledge of our community, aims and objectives, and are fully committed to our charity’s purpose and beneficiaries.
Volunteering is a great way to get involved with The Brompton Fountain and meet new people.
Why not get your company or workplace involved with raising funds for The Brompton Fountain. There are lots of ways you can support us.
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Here you can read stories of families we have helped, after reading them please think about supporting our work by making a donation.
I was 30 weeks pregnant when I found out that our baby was going to need heart surgery as she had a condition called Coarctation of the Aorta, as well as a VSD (Ventricular Septal Defect) and three ASDs (Atrial Septal Defects).
Our world fell apart as we had never even heard of these conditions before, and we felt really scared. But the next 10 weeks went by really fast, and eventually, Isabel was born, an otherwise very healthy baby girl weighing 8lb 4oz. She had been born by Caesarian Section so I couldn’t see her until she was a few hours old, and by then, a medical team had arrived to move her to the Royal Brompton Hospital. It was the hardest to watch them get my baby ready to be taken away from me. I had to remain at the maternity hospital for now, and my world stopped.
Two days later, my husband called me at 7:30 am to tell me that Isabel’s condition had deteriorated and she would need surgery that morning. I was then discharged from hospital and made my way to the Royal Brompton just as she was going to the operating theatre. I was dying to meet my baby, and every time I was close to seeing her she was going again, I felt helpless and didn’t know which way to turn.
Five hours later, we were told the news that the operation was a success and we would be able to see Isabel very soon. I finally felt I could breathe again.
The next day Isabel was doing amazingly well, and the doctors were able to take her breathing tube out. For the first time, I could give my beautiful baby girls a cuddle, and it was the best feeling ever!
On day 2 after her operation, she was still doing brilliantly and with most of the tubes now removed, she was fit enough to move from Intensive Care over to Rose ward.
By day 5, she was breastfeeding and doing really well, you would never have known what this beautiful little girl had just been through. On day 7, the doctors told us we could take her home.
I cried my eyes out; it was all over, and she had amazed all of us. She was a warrior, she is our hero, and she’s still doing fantastically well. This is all down to the staff at Royal Brompton; without them, she wouldn’t be here today, we are so grateful to to all involved!
Charity number: 1110339