Six months, ten minutes apart.
When little Léa needed protocol treatment 480 km from home, her parents came too — and stayed in our Lyon house through every chemotherapy cycle. They never missed a morning round.
Read Léa's storyWhen a child needs months of treatment far from home, the family should not have to sleep in a car. We build hospitality houses next to hospitals across Europe — so no one ever has to choose between care and a place to rest.
A serious diagnosis travels with an entire family. Parents who refuse to leave their child's side. Spouses who drive seven hours to a specialist clinic. Patients who must return weekly for treatments their local hospital cannot provide.
For these families, the cost of care is rarely just the medical bill. It is the hotel near the hospital. The meals eaten in cafeterias. The job hours lost to the road. We exist to take that second weight off their shoulders — so the only thing that matters is healing.
Private rooms. Shared kitchens. Quiet libraries. Children's play spaces. Designed by hospitality architects, run with the warmth of a guesthouse — never a charity.
Every house is within a five-minute walk of its partner hospital. Treatments at dawn, family dinners at dusk, no taxis between — that proximity is the gift.
Our house managers are nurses, social workers, and former families themselves. They cook a meal. They listen. They translate the bewildering. No paperwork at the door.
For four months we lived ten minutes from our daughter's bone-marrow ward — in a room with a window, sheets that smelled of lavender, and other parents at the kitchen table at midnight. Without Shelter for Health, we would have lost our home.— Marta & Henrik, Stockholm
When little Léa needed protocol treatment 480 km from home, her parents came too — and stayed in our Lyon house through every chemotherapy cycle. They never missed a morning round.
Read Léa's storyAnwar travelled 200 km for dialysis three times a week. For two years, he slept in his car the nights before. Now he sleeps in a bed and walks to his appointment.
Read Anwar's storyThree families. Three different illnesses. One long shared kitchen table. They became a support group no doctor could have prescribed — and they still meet, years later.
Read their storyA family's stay costs about as much as a holiday. Yours, instead, would change a life.