It is estimated that between 10,000 and 20,000 seriously ill children need an intravenous (IV) line or catheter each year, just in Australia.
This was the stacking reality of Gold Coast boy, Oliver Glover. He was born premature, with a bowel obstruction, which lead him to go into surgery right after his birth and lose most of his small bowel in this process. He spent the first eight months of his life in hospital, which meant that he needed to get a central venous catheter in his chest, which provided him with Total parenteral nutrition (TPN) for six nights a week.