A MUM has shared a heart-breaking image of her 10-year-old daughter in hospital after a suicide attempt because of alleged bullying at school in Worcestershire.

Jess Brown rushed her daughter Lily-Jo to Worcestershire Royal Hospital on Monday night – the day before her birthday – after she refused to eat and took something that made her unwell.

“My daughter is fighting for her life because of bullying,” said Jess, a mum-of-three from Worcester.

Lily-Jo started at Witton Middle School, Droitwich, in September and after a couple of weeks her mum noticed she was not herself and had become withdrawn.

“She’s been going downhill, not eating, a lot more tired than she used to be,” explained Jess. “We’re backwards and forwards to the doctors. She admitted she was being bullied straight away.”

Over the last 12 weeks, Jess has been into the school “every day” to discuss the issue with staff but feels “nothing has been resolved”.

In a letter to headteacher Cath Crossley last week Jess described how her daughter has “constantly been bullied” by one other female pupil since starting at the school.

“She has pulled her hair, pushed her, smacked Lily-Jo and also shut a locker door on Lily-Jo's head, stamped on her foot when it was broken – the list is endless.

“I have to fight with Lily-Jo to get her to school, with her crying, screaming and making herself sick,” the letter continued.

“I am disgusted my daughter is being bullied yet nothing is being done about it.”

Jess said the school has been made aware of every occurrence and has filled out incident reports and put the offending pupil in isolation, but the bullying has continued.

Lily-Jo has told her mum numerous times “she doesn’t want to be here” and with her daughter now in hospital, Jess says she has no choice but to find her a new school.

“Nobody seems to want to help at all,” said Jess.

“We will not be sending her back to the school, it’s not worth the risk.”

“The doctor said if we had left her two more weeks, she would be dead. I’m not going to bury my child.”

Having refused to eat and admitting she had taken something on Monday afternoon, Lily-Jo was taken to her GP around 4.30pm.

Jess said Lily-Jo was displaying the symptoms of jaundice and admitted: “I thought my daughter was going to die.”

The GP then told Jess to take her daughter to hospital right away.

While they waited in A&E, Jess said Lily-Jo was “disorientated” but, having spent the night in hospital, is now “stable”.

“I’ve got a daughter now in hospital on her birthday on different drips and being examined by mental health doctors,” she said.

The mum added that Lily-Jo’s two younger siblings went to school on Tuesday “heartbroken” and “desperate to see their sister”.

Cath Crossley, headteacher of Witton Middle School, said: "We were made aware of these bullying allegations and took immediate action, following the relevant school policies and procedures.

"Face-to-face meetings were organised with myself, the deputy headteacher and our chair of Governors with the families involved and the families have also been working with our support worker.

"This school takes all allegations of bullying extremely seriously, this includes racist, homophobic, gender-based or bullying related to disabilities.

"Our school maintains a strict anti-bullying policy, which can be accessed on our school website.

"This week is Anti-Bullying Week 2018 and we are fully supporting it.

"We are using this week to hold a special Kindness Week where children will be working together to create a Kindness Tree which will feature special messages of kindness.

"Pupils will also be undertaking some classroom learning on the theme of anti-bullying."

She added: "Our thoughts go out to Lily-Jo and her family at this difficult time."