Taiya has too much to live for.

Support the next breakthrough in heart research

All donations of $2 or more are tax-deductible. Our minimum donation amount is $5 due to the cost of processing transactions.

Taiya wearing a red t-shirt and blue vest stands in a park pathway smiling

Support the next breakthrough in heart research

All donations of $2 or more are tax-deductible. Our minimum donation amount is $5 due to the cost of processing transactions.

When doctors told Taiya that her heart was failing, she knew she had to keep fighting.

Two years ago, Taiya went into cardiogenic shock. Her husband and family were called in to say goodbye.

But against all expectations, Taiya survived.

​​People like Taiya living with heart failure need your support to help keep heart research moving.

Scientia Associate Professor Thanh Nho Do and his team are developing a groundbreaking robotic heart assistant. 

This technology aims to provide another solution for people living with heart failure, helping give them their strength – and their lives – back.

​​​Research like this has the potential to help more people like Taiya living with heart failure.

Your gift can help give years to future generations

Give now and your gift can help:

Icon of a hospital building with a medical cross above the entrance
Support research for clinical trials
Stethoscope and heart icon representing a heart health check.
Give health professionals access to the latest guidelines for preventing, diagnosing and treating heart disease
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Support groundbreaking research into treatments for heart disease
Icon of a human heart with an ECG heartbeat line
Fund research to improve recovery and survival following a cardiac emergency

Help make heart disease history

Taiya standing on footpath of a suburban street wearing a 'Step up for Heart' red t-shirt
Our work is over 80% donor funded, relying on the generosity of people who believe that research is the only way to make heart disease history.

Taiya hopes that by supporting heart research, more people with heart disease can have better outcomes.