A couple whose toddler has spent more than a year 'living' in hospital awaiting a life-saving heart transplant have issued a desperate plea for more children to become organ donors.

Amelia Bolter was just 17-month-olds when her mum took her to the GP for a suspected ear infection only to be told the tot was 'waiting at God's door' and had to be put on a transplant list.

Amelia, now two and a half, was diagnosed in June last year with supraventricular tachycardia - which causes episodes of abnormally fast heart rates.

After being transferred from her local hospital last October, she has spent the past ten months at Great Ormond Street Hospital, London, hooked up to a machine keeping her alive.

Her mum Jodie Woolford, 31, and her partner Rich Bolter, 33, have both signed up to become organ donors since being warned Amelia could face an agonising two-year wait for a suitable match.

Amelia, Jodie and Rich in hospital. See SWNS story SWLNheart. A mum who took her 17-month-old daughter to the GP for a suspected ear infection  was told  the toddler was 'waiting at God's door' and had to be put on a heart transplant list. Amelia Bolter, now 22-months-old, was taken to her doctor's in Chippenham, Wilts by her mother Jodie Woolford, 31,on June 16 this year. Jodie thought Amelia was suffering from an ear infection or teething issues as she kept rubbing her ear, but was shocked when the doctor found her heart rate racing between at 180-220 beats per minute. She was immediately rushed to Bath Hospital, before being transferred to Bristol Children's hospital the same day.
(Courtesy Jodie Woolford / SWNS)

But Jodie said they had to speak out as there is a desperate shortage of child donors.

She said: "The difficulty with Amelia's condition is that finding child donors is incredibly hard, and parents rarely talk about organ donation until an accident has already happened.

"By then it is usually too late, and the organs are useless. So, we want to urge parents to make a decision now, so that their children, if something happens, can live on.

"We are not the first people whose child needs an organ transplant, and we won't be the last. Even if Amelia sadly dies, we'll try to let her donate what she can to others."

Amelia was initially taken to her doctors in Chippenham, Wilts by her mother on June 16th this year.

Jodie thought Amelia was suffering from an ear infection or teething issues as she kept rubbing her ear, but was shocked when the doctor found her heart rate racing between at 180-220 beats per minute.

She was immediately rushed to Bath Hospital, before being transferred to Bristol Children's hospital the same day.

She was later rushed to Great Ormond Street on October 30 last year, when she faced several infections including pneumonia, a gut infection and sepsis.

Since then she has undergone several 'wash outs' and 'chamber change' surgeries to remove blood clots from her heart, and has suffered two strokes.

Despite the horrific challenges though, her defiant parents are still determined to find her a donor - and are urging fellow parents to consider adding their children to donor lists.

She said: "Parents should never have to think about outliving their children, but accidents happen and children do get sick.

"I've signed up to become an organ donor, and so has Rich. We've even signed up our second daughter, Blossom, who was born during our time in hospital with Amelia."

Amelia remains at Great Ormond Street where doctors have told her parents to be prepared for a two year wait before Amelia can go home with a new heart.

Supported by the Sick Children's Trust, the family eventually found a place in Great Ormond Street Hospital, where they live in the Trust's temporary accommodation.

Thanks to the support of nurses and doctors at the hospital, who Amelia thinks of as her uncles and aunties, she has been able to survive her condition - and even started some schooling this year.

Jodie added: "Amelia is steady. She has learned how to crawl and walk independently now, and her bowels have started working again now.

"She is a bit wobbly still, because she has a wire almost like a lead attached to her at all times to keep her alive, but she loves it there.

"I've only been home once in the whole ten months we have been here, but the hospital has provided us amazing support. I feel safe leaving her in their hands.

"She loves school, even if it is only for an hour a day. They help her do arts and crafts, and even some 'cooking'; making sandwiches and fruit salad.

"It has meant that Rich and I have some time to ourselves too, even if it is just watching some Netflix while she is at school or asleep.

"It is a bit tragic and sad though, in a good way, that she is so happy here. She thinks of the hospital as her home - which for us is difficult as we wish she was at her real home."

Jodie is supporting The Grand Appeal and the Sick Children's Trust in their fundraising efforts, and trying to raise awareness for heart conditions.

She says that the process of signing up to become a donor is 'quick and easy' - and urges parents to talk about it before it is too late.

She said: "Until we know we have a donor, we just don't know how we will react. But it would be life changing for us if we were told one was available.

"If it wasn't for this machine, Amelia wouldn't be here. That's why raising awareness is so important.

"If she passes away, we will hopefully be able to let her donate her heart valves. For us it's a comfort of knowing that if something happened, a bit of her would live on through another child.

"It'd be an amazing gift for us to get a new heart for her, and a selfless act by a bereaved parent. Like us, we hope others would like their own children to live on.

"Accidents do happen, but your child's death may save the life of another."

You can find out more about organ donation here.

SWLNheart - by Ed Cullinane