Born in 1983, ‘Tiny Lives’ was the brain child of Dr Hans Steiner, a paediatrician who with Dr Edmund Hey took care of babies at the Neonatal Unit in the Princess Mary Maternity Hospital. ‘Tiny Lives’ became the name for the charitable fund relating to the care of babies at the Princess Mary.
In 1993, the Neonatal Units at the Princess Mary Maternity Hospital and Newcastle General Hospital merged into a new unit, based at the Royal Victoria Infirmary. Because each of the two units had been raising money separately, when the two units joined, the charitable funds were combined too. Until then, Tiny Lives had been held by the Special Trustees of the Newcastle Hospitals but when the new combined fund was created (still called Tiny Lives), its management was moved to the Community Foundation serving Tyne & Wear and Northumberland.
By 2012, the Tiny Lives Fund had developed to the point where it needed to become a charity in its own right, rather than simply a charitable fund. In early 2013 under the name “The Tiny Lives Trust”, Tiny Lives began its life as an independent charity.
Tiny Lives has supported thousands of babies and their families over this time. Each year, the charity supports over 800 babies and their families from the RVI alone and aims to raise £580,000 a year to maintain this support.