Connecting WA
children to the
clinicians they need,
wherever they live

Western Australia is vast, and our communities are separated by thousands of kilometres. Where you are born and live shouldn't define the healthcare you receive. Telethon continues to invest in support to strengthen clinical health services delivered in WA, powering hospitals, health service providers and outreach services to reach children and their families across our expansive state.

Telethon beneficiaries continue to provide additional value to our healthcare system providing state of the art equipment to metro and regional hospitals, enabling hybrid and allied mobile health service delivery and supporting emergency care on country to ensure leading specialists can travel and connect with families statewide.

Connecting WA
children to the
clinicians they need,
wherever they live

Western Australia is vast, and our communities are separated by thousands of kilometres. Where you are born and live shouldn't define the healthcare you receive. Telethon continues to invest in support to strengthen clinical health services delivered in WA, powering hospitals, health service providers and outreach services to reach children and their families across our expansive state.

Telethon beneficiaries continue to provide additional value to our healthcare system providing state of the art equipment to metro and regional hospitals, enabling hybrid and allied mobile health service delivery and supporting emergency care on country to ensure leading specialists can travel and connect with families statewide.

Lions Outback Vision


Established as a priority ophthalmic need by the Federal Government in 2024, the Lions Outback Vision van is partnering with eight schools in the Goldfields–Esperance region to deliver mobile eye screening and assessment services. Supporting 324 children, the van has identified untreated eye issues and referred students to Kalgoorlie Regional Hospital for further care.

Earbus


Ensuring children in the Pilbara have access to free ear and hearing services, Earbus have delivered clinics that have completed 1,165 ear, hearing and health screens, conducted 541 diagnostic assessments, and reviewed 243 children by a GP or nurse practitioner, with 46 needing further intervention at Telethon supported hospitals and health campuses.

Neovision


Neovision
will introduce WA’s first virtual neonatology service across Perth Children’s Hospital Ward 3B, Armadale, Midland, Rockingham, Osborne Park and NETS WA Ambulance, enabling real-time two-way audio-visual support for emergency neonatal care and retrievals, giving families comfort knowing specialist teams are guiding each step of intervention.

Royal Flying Doctor Service


The RFDS Fortescue Heli-Med Service provides fast transfers for preterm and critically ill newborns across regional WA, ensuring they reach life-saving specialist care at the Child and Adolescent Health Service Neonatology Units at Perth Children’s Hospital and King Edward Memorial Hospital. In its pilot year, the service safely transported 35 babies from remote areas where urgent neonatal treatment wasn’t available.

Lions Outback Vision

Established as a priority ophthalmic need by the Federal Government in 2024, the Lions Outback Vision van is partnering with eight schools in the Goldfields–Esperance region to deliver mobile eye screening and assessment services. Supporting 324 children, the van has identified untreated eye issues and referred students to Kalgoorlie Regional Hospital for further care.

Earbus

Ensuring children in the Pilbara have access to free ear and hearing services, Earbus have delivered clinics that have completed 1,165 ear, hearing and health screens, conducted 541 diagnostic assessments, and reviewed 243 children by a GP or nurse practitioner, with 46 needing further intervention at Telethon supported hospitals and health campuses.

Neovision

Neovision will introduce WA’s first virtual neonatology service across Perth Children’s Hospital Ward 3B, Armadale, Midland, Rockingham, Osborne Park and NETS WA Ambulance, enabling real-time two-way audio-visual support for emergency neonatal care and retrievals, giving families comfort knowing specialist teams are guiding each step of intervention.

Royal Flying
Doctor Service

The RFDS Fortescue Heli-Med Service provides fast transfers for preterm and critically ill newborns across regional WA, ensuring they reach life-saving specialist care at the Child and Adolescent Health Service Neonatology Units at Perth Children’s Hospital and King Edward Memorial Hospital. In its pilot year, the service safely transported 35 babies from remote areas where urgent neonatal treatment wasn’t available.


More than 50 beneficiaries

...work alongside our healthcare providers to ensure vital services reach every corner of Western Australia.


2,611
pieces of essential equipment

...have been delivered to health services statewide.


132
clinicians
and staff

...have delivered medical care and vital programs and assessments across the State.

More than 50 beneficiaries

...work alongside our healthcare providers to ensure vital services reach every corner of Western Australia.

2,611 pieces of essential equipment

...have been delivered to health services statewide.

132 clinicians
and staff

...have delivered medical care and vital programs and assessments across the State.

Neonatal care across emergency services - made possible by you

The first hours of life can be the most fragile but, thanks to your generosity, our tiniest patients’ care is safer, whether they’re born in the city, the regions, or anywhere in between.

When a newborn is fighting for every breath, there is no such thing as a “simple transfer”. Every bump matters. Every handover matters. Every second matters. Until now those moments were vastly different depending on where a baby was born — different stretchers, different mounts, different incubator interfaces. 

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Thanks to Telethon, WA now has standardised neonatal transport capability across fixed wing, helicopter and ambulance services throughout WA. The Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) and Newborn Emergency Transport Service (NETS) at the Child and Adolescent Health Service Neonatology Units at Perth Children’s and King Edward Memorial Hospitals now use the same Stryker stretchers and Cherub interfaces.

This alignment means NETS transport cots can be seamlessly deployed to even the most remote parts of WA. The journey is now seamless across all modes of transport. You made that possible.

Now, no matter where a baby takes their first breath — in Perth, in the Goldfields, in the Kimberley, or on a remote station far from the nearest hospital — if they need the services of the RFDS and NETS WA, their journey is safe, standardised and world-class.


Neonatal care across emergency services - made possible by you

When a newborn is fighting for every breath, there is no such thing as a “simple transfer”. Every bump matters. Every handover matters. Every second matters.

Until now, those moments were vastly different depending on where a baby is born — different stretchers, different mounts, different incubator interfaces, different ways to ventilate a baby whose life depends on stability. Thanks to Telethon, WA now has a fully standardised neonatal transport system across air, road and tertiary care.

READ MORE

Thanks to Telethon, WA now has standardised neonatal transport capability across fixed wing, helicopter and ambulance services throughout WA. The Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS) and Newborn Emergency Transport Service (NETS) at the Child and Adolescent Health Service Neonatology Units at Perth Children’s and King Edward Memorial Hospitals now use the same Stryker stretchers and Cherub interfaces.

This alignment means NETS transport cots can be seamlessly deployed to even the most remote parts of WA. The journey is now seamless across all modes of transport. You made that possible.

Now, no matter where a baby takes their first breath — in Perth, in the Goldfields, in the Kimberley, or on a remote station far from the nearest hospital — if they need the services of the RFDS and NETS WA, their journey is safe, standardised and world-class.


Going the distance for Neurokids

The NeuroKids program is transforming neurological care for children across Western Australia from Esperance to the Kimberley. Through Telethon’s support, The Neurological Council of WA employ two paediatric neurological nurses who provide free, flexible and family centred care, helping families navigate complex conditions with confidence across the state. With 111 home visits, 737 telehealth consults and 177 episodes of advocacy, they bridge hospital, community and home, reducing stress and preventing avoidable hospitalisations. Acting as a trusted clinical lifeline, NeuroKids nurses have travelled far and wider to ensure clearer care pathways for 157 vulnerable children.

Going the distance for Neurokids

The NeuroKids program is transforming neurological care for children across Western Australia from Esperance to the Kimberley. Through Telethon’s support, The Neurological Council of WA employ two paediatric neurological nurses who provide free, flexible and family centred care, helping families navigate complex conditions with confidence across the state. With 111 home visits, 737 telehealth consults and 177 episodes of advocacy, they bridge hospital, community and home, reducing stress and preventing avoidable hospitalisations. Acting as a trusted clinical lifeline, NeuroKids nurses have travelled far and wider to ensure clearer care pathways for 157 vulnerable children.

Equipment to support our smallest patients

ECMO for the sickest newborns

The Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) unit at PCH gives WA’s sickest babies a lifeline, temporarily taking over heart and lung function so fragile organs can rest, recover, and, ultimately, survive. In partnership with the Women and Infants Research Foundation, a world-first research program is exploring pump-free ECMO for preterm infants under 2kg, pushing the frontier for babies who once had no options. Telethon’s support ensures the best of science and the best of equipment and care now stand side by side in WA.

Equipment to support our smallest patients

ECMO for the sickest newborns

The Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) unit at PCH gives WA’s sickest babies a lifeline, temporarily taking over heart and lung function so fragile organs can rest, recover, and, ultimately, survive. In partnership with the Women and Infants Research Foundation, a world-first research program is exploring pump-free ECMO for preterm infants under 2kg, pushing the frontier for babies who once had no options. Telethon’s support ensures the best of science and the best of equipment and care now stand side by side in WA.

Seeing fragile skin,
saving tiny lives

Thanks to world-first research at King Edward Memorial Hospital, doctors can now detect skin injuries earlier and protect the tiniest babies.

Seeing fragile skin,
saving tiny lives

Thanks to world-first research at King Edward Memorial Hospital, doctors can now detect skin injuries earlier and protect the tiniest babies.

Bedside advances changing care

Children living with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) face a relentless cycle of inflammation meaning repeat colonoscopies, fasting, and anaesthesia. A new bedside intestinal ultrasound at Perth Children’s Hospital gives teams an immediate, non-invasive window into the bowel. A child lies back and within minutes, clinicians can map inflammation and involve families in decisions they can see onscreen. Since integrating this approach, 325 children have avoided unnecessary colonoscopies and uncomfortable bowel preparation, and early signs of relapse are being caught before symptoms flare.

A gentler touch - Point of Care ultrasound

A one-year-old’s wrist artery is just 1.5mm wide, making blind insertion risky and distressing. Point of care ultrasound gives clinicians real time imaging to guide needles safely into tiny vessels, reducing trauma and delays. Thanks to your generosity, extra units across theatres, NICU, PICU and cardiac suites at Perth Children’s Hospital are meeting rising demand and improving care for around 14,000 theatre patients each year, turning frightening moments into calmer, gentler experiences for vulnerable children.

Advanced MRI care for tiny patients 

Thanks to your generosity, Perth Children’s Hospital has a new MRI-compatible ventilator, allowing clinicians to give newborns the same advanced, lung-protective breathing support during MRI scans as they receive at the bedside. This ventilator delivers reliable, adaptive support and provides real-time feedback, enabling clinicians to tailor care to each baby’s needs. More than 100 newborns have benefited from this life-changing technology.

Bedside advances changing care

Children living with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) face a relentless cycle of inflammation meaning repeat colonoscopies, fasting, and anaesthesia. A new bedside intestinal ultrasound at Perth Children’s Hospital gives teams an immediate, non-invasive window into the bowel. A child lies back and within minutes, clinicians can map inflammation and involve families in decisions they can see onscreen. Since integrating this approach, 325 children have avoided unnecessary colonoscopies and uncomfortable bowel preparation, and early signs of relapse are being caught before symptoms flare.

A gentler touch - Point of Care ultrasound

A one-year-old’s wrist artery is just 1.5mm wide, making blind insertion risky and distressing. Point of care ultrasound gives clinicians real time imaging to guide needles safely into tiny vessels, reducing trauma and delays. Thanks to your generosity, extra units across theatres, NICU, PICU and cardiac suites at Perth Children’s Hospital are meeting rising demand and improving care for around 14,000 theatre patients each year, turning frightening moments into calmer, gentler experiences for vulnerable children.

Advanced MRI care for tiny patients

Thanks to your generosity, Perth Children’s Hospital has a new MRI-compatible ventilator, allowing clinicians to give newborns the same advanced, lung-protective breathing support during MRI scans as they receive at the bedside. This ventilator delivers reliable, adaptive support and provides real-time feedback, enabling clinicians to tailor care to each baby’s needs. More than 100 newborns have benefited from this life-changing technology.

Every child a superhero

What started as a dad’s idea to comfort sick kids has become something truly special. Supertees transform hospital gowns into costumes, bringing imagination, dignity and joy to children in hospital.

Every child
a superhero

What started as a dad’s idea to comfort sick kids has become something truly special. Supertees transform hospital gowns into costumes, bringing imagination, dignity and joy to children in hospital.

How your generosity cares for the hearts and minds of kids facing cancer

When treatment demands proximity to hospital, but home is hours away, families face an unbearable dilemma — split apart or relocate at immense cost. Your generosity answered that fear with compassion.

Your support of the Sony Foundation’s You Can Stay Program has provided families with 2,294 nights of free accommodation, ensuring 28 children had a safe, stable home close to Perth Children’s Hospital. On average, each family stayed 81 nights, wrapped in the assurance that they could be together while facing treatment.

READ MORE

This is where philanthropy shines brightest — reducing financial strain by covering accommodation costs at a time when many parents have lost income to become full-time carers. Children from regional and outer-metro communities can stay near life-saving care, and siblings can stay together, holding each other through the hardest days.

At just six years old, Kellin is undergoing intensive chemotherapy for a rare, incurable cancer. His family lives 80 km away — a distance that becomes dangerous in heavy traffic, when he must always remain within one hour of the hospital. Because of your generosity, Kellin and his family have received over 560 nights of accommodation close to care. “It changed our trajectory in a positive way,” his mum shared.


How your generosity cares for the hearts and minds of kids facing cancer

When treatment demands proximity to hospital, but home is hours away, families face an unbearable dilemma — split apart or relocate at immense cost. Your generosity answered that fear with compassion.

Your support of the Sony Foundation’s You Can Stay Program has provided families with 2,294 nights of free accommodation, ensuring 28 children had a safe, stable home close to Perth Children’s Hospital. On average, each family stayed 81 nights, wrapped in the assurance that they could be together while facing treatment.

READ MORE

This is where philanthropy shines brightest — reducing financial strain by covering accommodation costs at a time when many parents have lost income to become full-time carers. Children from regional and outer-metro communities can stay near life-saving care, and siblings can stay together, holding each other through the hardest days.

At just six years old, Kellin is undergoing intensive chemotherapy for a rare, incurable cancer. His family lives 80 km away — a distance that becomes dangerous in heavy traffic, when he must always remain within one hour of the hospital. Because of your generosity, Kellin and his family have received over 560 nights of accommodation close to care. “It changed our trajectory in a positive way,” his mum shared.



Making treatment less traumatic

Every year, childhood cancer turns lives upside down, replacing ordinary moments with fear, uncertainty, and painful procedures. Thanks to Telethon’s support of Camp Quality, a dedicated Occupational Therapist at PCH is helping children understand their treatment, feel in control, and cope with anxiety.

READ MORE

Since launching in 2024, the service has supported 173 children through play-based therapy, social stories, preparation strategies, and gentle distraction, ensuring children experience less distress and medical teams can deliver life-saving treatment more smoothly.


Outcomes have been profound — a 42% increase in therapeutic support, growing early referrals from medical staff, and families reporting greater confidence and reduced trauma. Doctors say the impact is comparable to adding another core clinician to the team.


Your support has made this transformation possible, giving WA children facing cancer the comfort, skills, and strength they deserve during the toughest moments of their lives.



A community that cares

The Kids Cancer Support Group (KCSG) wraps its arms around families the moment childhood cancer enters their lives. It shows up in the small, steady rituals that bring light to long weeks on the ward. Friday night pizza on the oncology ward, where the smell of warm food and the sound of laughter create a rare sense of normality. And the KCSG Playgroup, where immunocompromised children can safely explore, play, and connect without fear.

READ MORE

In 2025, your kindness helped KCSG launch a Peer Support Program, employing a dedicated play therapist to walk alongside children and siblings affected by cancer. Through one-on-one sessions, these little ones learned new ways to express big feelings, to feel seen, and to find calm in the chaos. Over the year, the program provided 109 hours of therapy, creating space for healing and hope.


More than 75 children felt the impact of these services. Behind each number is a child rediscovering confidence, a parent exhaling for the first time in days, a family finding its footing again. Because of you, families facing the unthinkable are finding community, connection, and moments of peace in the hardest chapters of their lives.


Making treatment less traumatic

Every year, childhood cancer turns lives upside down, replacing ordinary moments with fear, uncertainty, and painful procedures. Thanks to Telethon’s support of Camp Quality, a dedicated Occupational Therapist at PCH is helping children understand their treatment, feel in control, and cope with anxiety.

READ MORE

Since launching in 2024, the service has supported 173 children through play-based therapy, social stories, preparation strategies, and gentle distraction, ensuring children experience less distress and medical teams can deliver life-saving treatment more smoothly.


Outcomes have been profound — a 42% increase in therapeutic support, growing early referrals from medical staff, and families reporting greater confidence and reduced trauma. Doctors say the impact is comparable to adding another core clinician to the team.


Your support has made this transformation possible, giving WA children facing cancer the comfort, skills, and strength they deserve during the toughest moments of their lives.



A community
that cares

The Kids Cancer Support Group (KCSG) wraps its arms around families the moment childhood cancer enters their lives. It shows up in the small, steady rituals that bring light to long weeks on the ward. Friday night pizza on the oncology ward, where the smell of warm food and the sound of laughter create a rare sense of normality. And the KCSG Playgroup, where immunocompromised children can safely explore, play, and connect without fear.

READ MORE

In 2025, your kindness helped KCSG launch a Peer Support Program, employing a dedicated play therapist to walk alongside children and siblings affected by cancer. Through one-on-one sessions, these little ones learned new ways to express big feelings, to feel seen, and to find calm in the chaos. Over the year, the program provided 109 hours of therapy, creating space for healing and hope.


More than 75 children felt the impact of these services. Behind each number is a child rediscovering confidence, a parent exhaling for the first time in days, a family finding its footing again. Because of you, families facing the unthinkable are finding community, connection, and moments of peace in the hardest chapters of their lives.


No family faces it alone

When two sisters in the same family are diagnosed with cancer, the journey is unimaginable. But alongside medical care, a network of Telethon-supported organisations helps families find strength, support and moments of joy along the way.

The sound of joy in hospital

For children in hospital, a little joy can make a big difference. Radio Lollipop brings music, play and laughter to hospital wards, helping kids feel like kids again during some of their toughest days.

No family
faces it alone

When two sisters in the same family are diagnosed with cancer, the journey is unimaginable. But alongside medical care, a network of Telethon-supported organisations helps families find strength, support and moments of joy along the way.

The sound of
joy in hospital

For children in hospital, a little joy can make a big difference. Radio Lollipop brings music, play and laughter to hospital wards, helping kids feel like kids again during some of their toughest days.

Breathing easier: how your generosity is changing the future for WA kids

Every parent remembers the first breath their child takes, a tiny rise of the chest, a fragile promise of life. But for many families, breathing has never come easily. Nights broken by coughing. Days shadowed by wheeze. Hospital bags permanently packed “just in case.” Because of your generosity, Telethon is helping change these stories.

Asthma remains one of the most common chronic illnesses in Australian children. National data shows 1 in 10 boys and 1 in 16 girls under 15 live with asthma. Almost half of all asthma hospitalisations are for children aged 0–14, stark reminders of just how much WA children need our collective care.

Breathing easier: how your generosity is changing the future for WA kids

Every parent remembers the first breath their child takes, a tiny rise of the chest, a fragile promise of life. But for many families, breathing has never come easily. Nights broken by coughing. Days shadowed by wheeze. Hospital bags permanently packed “just in case.” Because of your generosity, Telethon is helping change these stories.

Asthma remains one of the most common chronic illnesses in Australian children. National data shows 1 in 10 boys and 1 in 16 girls under 15 live with asthma. Almost half of all asthma hospitalisations are for children aged 0–14, stark reminders of just how much WA children need our collective care.


Discovery begins with a single breath

At the University of Western Australia, scientists are rewriting what’s possible for respiratory health. Through your support, Professor Mark Nicol and his team are leading the way having completed the largest respiratory microbiome study in children ever undertaken, analysing 4,267 samples from 950 children.

READ MORE

Their goal, to discover protective bacterial strains that could one day be delivered as a simple nasal spray to prevent or reduce asthma severity. The science is complex, but the idea is beautifully simple: what if future generations didn’t have to grow up with asthma at all? This research could transform childhood respiratory care, especially for families who live with constant worry.




Where families find answers

At Respiratory Care WA’s Children’s Respiratory Hub, your generosity brings early diagnosis, specialised clinical care, and the newly launched Under Six Years Wheeze Program to families who often feel overwhelmed and alone. Parents of little ones with wheeze report high stress and reduced quality of life, but with your help, they now receive practical education, tailored treatment plans, and reassurance that their child’s breath is understood and protected.

READ MORE

Children like Joe. Before his first birthday, Joe had already endured four rounds of steroids. Nights were restless; breath was a battle. His mum, Tammie, remembers holding him upright for hours just so he could sleep. A formal diagnosis felt out of reach because he was so young.


Then, at age six, Joe visited the Respiratory Hub for a paediatric lung function test, funded not by institutions, but by people like you who donate over Telethon weekend. With a correct diagnosis and a preventer inhaler, Joe finally began to breathe without fear.


Now, he races BMX. He’s ranked second in WA, sixth in Australia, and dreams of the World Series. “I feel safer now that my asthma is controlled,” he says. “I can even run cross country!” That’s the power of your compassion: you didn’t just help Joe breathe; you helped him soar.


Discovery begins with a single breath

At the University of Western Australia, scientists are rewriting what’s possible for respiratory health. Through your support, Professor Mark Nicol and his team are leading the way having completed the largest respiratory microbiome study in children ever undertaken, analysing 4,267 samples from 950 children.

READ MORE

Their goal, to discover protective bacterial strains that could one day be delivered as a simple nasal spray to prevent or reduce asthma severity. The science is complex, but the idea is beautifully simple: what if future generations didn’t have to grow up with asthma at all? This research could transform childhood respiratory care, especially for families who live with constant worry.



Where families find answers

At Respiratory Care WA’s Children’s Respiratory Hub, your generosity brings early diagnosis, specialised clinical care, and the newly launched Under Six Years Wheeze Program to families who often feel overwhelmed and alone. Parents of little ones with wheeze report high stress and reduced quality of life, but with your help, they now receive practical education, tailored treatment plans, and reassurance that their child’s breath is understood and protected.

READ MORE

Children like Joe. Before his first birthday, Joe had already endured four rounds of steroids. Nights were restless; breath was a battle. His mum, Tammie, remembers holding him upright for hours just so he could sleep. A formal diagnosis felt out of reach because he was so young.

Then, at age six, Joe visited the Respiratory Hub for a paediatric lung function test, funded not by institutions, but by people like you who donate over Telethon weekend. With a correct diagnosis and a preventer inhaler, Joe finally began to breathe without fear.

Now, he races BMX. He’s ranked second in WA, sixth in Australia, and dreams of the World Series. “I feel safer now that my asthma is controlled,” he says. “I can even run cross country!” That’s the power of your compassion: you didn’t just help Joe breathe; you helped him soar.


Comfort that heals

Breathing struggles often bring long hospital stays. That’s why, thanks to your support, The Lung Warrior’s Respicare Packs have reached 1,689 WA children, giving them colouring, sensory items, books, and small joys that soften fear and build emotional resilience whilst on extended hospital stays.

For six-year-old Kaiden, recovering from major heart surgery complicated by respiratory issues, these packs were more than activities, they were comfort when he could barely sit up or speak. “The books gave him something to focus on,” his mum Christina shared. “It meant so much to feel supported.” Because of you, WA children are receiving more accurate diagnoses, fewer preventable hospitalisations, and greater emotional support.

Comfort that heals

Breathing struggles often bring long hospital stays. That’s why, thanks to your support, The Lung Warrior’s Respicare Packs have reached 1,689 WA children, giving them colouring, sensory items, books, and small joys that soften fear and build emotional resilience whilst on extended hospital stays.

For six-year-old Kaiden, recovering from major heart surgery complicated by respiratory issues, these packs were more than activities, they were comfort when he could barely sit up or speak. “The books gave him something to focus on,” his mum Christina shared. “It meant so much to feel supported.” Because of you, WA children are receiving more accurate diagnoses, fewer preventable hospitalisations, and greater emotional support.


Find out more about Telethon's impact on the WA community

Find out more about Telethon's impact on the WA community

If you would like to learn more about Telethon and how you can get involved, please contact the Telethon Team. 

Channel 7 Telethon Trust

50 Hasler Road, Osborne Park WA 6017 
PO Box 1777, DC Osborne Park WA 6916
(08) 9482 3974 – telethonoffice@telethon7.com  

Acknowledgement of Country 

Telethon acknowledges the Traditional Owners of Country throughout Western Australia and pays respect to Elders past and present. We recognise the significant importance of their cultural heritage, values and beliefs and how these contribute to the positive health and wellbeing of the whole community. 

This content was prepared for digital by MINT,
the commercial content studio for Seven West Media.  

If you would like to learn more about Telethon and how you can get involved, please contact the Telethon Team. 

Channel 7 Telethon Trust

50 Hasler Road, Osborne Park WA 6017 
PO Box 1777, DC Osborne Park WA 6916
(08) 9482 3974 – telethonoffice@telethon7.com  

Acknowledgement of Country 

Telethon acknowledges the Traditional Owners of Country throughout Western Australia and pays respect to Elders past and present. We recognise the significant importance of their cultural heritage, values and beliefs and how these contribute to the positive health and wellbeing of the whole community. 

This content was prepared for digital by MINT,
the commercial content studio for Seven West Media.