CLAIRE House Children's Hospice has launched a new appeal to cope with a rising demand for its services.

Money raised from the campaign, launched today, will be spent on increasing the care the charity offers families in their homes, helping more children at the hospice in Wirral and building a new £14m state-of-the-art facility in West Derby, Liverpool.

The charity's chief executive David Pastor says its priority is to increase the care and services it offers on Wirral, as it is really struggling to meet the demand.

He said: "The number of children coming to Claire House has risen 84% in the last six years.

"We are getting to the point where we risk having to turn families away.

"To stop this from happening we are asking the people of Merseyside to help us reach every dying child."

As part its campaign, which was launched in Liverpool today, real statements tell stories of what life is like for families who need help from Claire House.

The statements will be in Claire House shops, on the radio, on billboards around Liverpool and chalked onto the pavements around Liverpool One.

"There’s no manual to tell you what to do when you lose a child. Luckily most parents won’t need one.

"But for those who do, the practical advice of Claire House – helping to arrange the funeral and offering counselling to the whole family can be invaluable," says Nicki Givin from Aintree in Liverpool.

Her son, Shea, visited the hospice for six years but sadly passed away last October.

“There is nothing more they can do for our little boy,”

Jackie Wild from Bebington on the Wirral recalled the devastating moment she was told this by the doctors looking after her son.

Elliot came to Claire House for end of life care in 2011. He was nine years old when he died.

Had the family known about the hospice earlier, they could have benefitted from years more support.

One of the main reasons for the increase in demand is that advances in medicine mean that babies and young children, who are born with - or develop - serious illnesses, are living longer with ever more complex conditions.

Lesley Fellows, nurse consultant at Claire House said: "Our job is to help families spend precious time together making memories that will last a lifetime.

“We cannot change the prognosis of the children who come to Claire House but we can help families cope at some of the toughest times of their lives.

"This might mean getting a child out of hospital and providing medical care so they can either go home or come to the hospice,” she adds.

Claire House already has a site in West Derby, from which it offers limited day-care.

In order to deliver the complex medical care the children referred to the hospice need on a 24 hour basis, the charity will need to extensively renovate some areas of the old site and build others.

Claire House now looks after over 300 families, but the hospice is only reaching one in two of the children it could be. More than half of the children the hospice looks after come from north of the Mersey.

To find out more about how to get involved with the appeal visit www.clairehouse.org.uk