THE GIVE A CHILD HEALTH CHARITY
THE Sunday Mercury charity was set up in the 1953 to raise money to send asthmatic children for breaks in Switzerland.
It was recognised that time spent at high altitude significantly improved their breathing conditions.
The newspaper reported how philanthropic confectioner Christian Kunzle helped to fund boys suffering from asthma to be treated at the country’s Davos clinic.
Mr Kunzle was originally from Switzerland and made a fortune from producing Kunzle cakes at his factory in Birmingham and wanted to thank the city.
After the story appeared young asthma sufferer Brenda Jobson contacted the newspaper to ask why girls couldn’t go.
In response the Freddie Whitehead, editor at the time, started a fund known as Give A Girl Health - mainly so that Brenda could attend the Davos clinic.
She died before she could go.
But such was the response to the appeal, that arrangements were made to keep the fund going.
Freddie Whitehead discovered that the Red Cross had access to beds at the Davos clinic.
And with the help of Colonel Collins, Director of the Red Cross in Birmingham, and Dr Morrison Smith, chest consultant at Birmingham Children’s Hospital, he began sending up to half a dozen asthmatic girls for treatment at a time.
When Christian Kunzle died the boys were out on a limb, so the Give a Girl Health Fund included boys.
In more recent years the fund has sent three or four children for the long summer school holiday to an asthma clinic in the French Pyrenees and devoted some of its funds to the treatment of cystic fibrosis at Birmingham Children’s Hospital.
In 1995 the fund was established as a registered charity and changed its name to The Give A Child Health Charitable Trust.
In 1997 the readers of the Sunday Mercury raised £110,000 to equip and run a lung function laboratory at the new Birmingham Children’s Hospital.
Other projects have included funding an eczema nurse.
Dr Peter Weller, a consultant paediatrician in respiratory medicine at the hospital, said: “The appeal helps to fund many ongoing projects, and to pay salaries for individual specialists.
“It really does make a difference to the lives of children at the hospital.”
Readers have raised tens of thousands of pounds since the appeal started but we still need your support to be able to continue helping. Len.