SUE Ryder, the national healthcare charity, is launching an emergency appeal to save its end of life services.

The charity runs the Sue Ryder Duchess of Kent Hospice in Reading, which provides palliative and day therapy care to patients with life limiting conditions.

The charity said before the coronavirus struck, statutory funding only covered approximately one third of the costs involved in running the charity’s end of life care.

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Sue Ryder bridged that gap with fundraising efforts and income from its 450 shops nationwide.

With fundraising events now cancelled and its shops closed, the charity has a matter of months before it will have to close its hospices and hospice at home services across the country.

Sue Ryder will have a funding gap of £12 million over the next three months. Without immediate financial support, the critical end of life care it provides to thousands of families each year will cease.

The funding shortfall comes at a time when the NHS is relying on Sue Ryder to support them in caring for thousands of families as part of the fight against COVID-19.

Heidi Travis, Chief Executive at Sue Ryder, said: “We have been calling on the Government to support us but no funding has materialised.

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“The country will lose its hospices at a time when they are needed most.

“This is a plea and no less, we cannot wait any longer.

“Our doctors and nurses are working night and day to provide end of life care to more people now and in the coming weeks, than ever before.

“We are a critical front-line support service in the fight against Coronavirus yet we are on the brink of closure.

“We are all facing something we have never faced before and we are asking the public to give whatever you can afford to help us to help those who need it most.”

Please donate at www.sueryder.org/donate.