NEWS WRAP...

150 Strangers To Volunteer For Perth Quintuplet Parents

3 min read
150 Strangers To Volunteer For Perth Quintuplet Parents

Kim Tucci and her husband Vaughn welcomed their five brand new babies into the world in late January.

Kim, who has a nine-year-old son from a previous marriage and two daughters with her husband Vaughn, fell naturally pregnant with quintuplets while trying for a boy with her husband, it was a one-in-55 million chance.

We are very happy to announce the birth of our 5 beautiful babies, born on the 28th of January and just shy of 30 weeks.

We would like to say a big thank you to Dr Jan Dickinson for looking after me and the babies with such love and care. I was very lucky to have an amazing medical team supporting me. Thank you for giving me an exceptional birth!

The babies and I are both doing very well, thank you for all your well wishes and support.

Tiffany weight 1170g
Penelope weight 1160g
Beatrix weight 1210g
Allie weight 1200g
Keith weight 1269g

Up to 150 volunteers will rotate through a support roster to help new parents of eight children with an estimated 50 nappy changes and 40 bottle feeds each day.

Volunteer support program coordinator Krista Bingham of Perth and Districts Multiple Births Association (PDMBA), said in a first for the association, it would trial a community support program centred around the Tucci family.

“We’re trying to organise a roster, so we’re hoping to cover pretty much the whole day to be able to get some extra help in there for the parents. The volunteers will be doing stuff like helping to feed babies, changing nappies, helping with washing bottles and preparing feeds and changing linen and washing baby clothes and all those sort of tasks,” she said.

“They’ll also help with cuddling the babies which is really important because multiple birth babies need cuddles just as much as single babies do.”

“We have such a range of people, we’ve got a couple of ladies that had triplet themselves that are grown up now, lots of families with twins, lots of grandparents, lots of professionals as well – midwives, nurses, teachers,” she said.

“The thing they all have in common is they all love babies and they all want to help.”

Ms Bingham went on to say that the 150 volunteers had already been screened and were attending a training workshop ahead the babies’ being brought home from King Edward Memorial Hospital.

If the program works out to be successful, she hopes it may be extended to other multiple birth parents who need extra support.

source

Avatar photo
About Author

Cherie Bobbins

Cherie Bobbins creates an authentic account of motherhood from the front-lines with a central theme of empowering other mothers through Cherie's first...Read More hand experiences. Her aim for every piece of content created is to serve someone, sparking them to exclaim, "OMG, Cherie Bobbins totally gets me, it's exactly what I needed and I am not alone!" Residing in Melbourne, experiencing four seasons in one day, Cherie has had an overflowing, clean basket of laundry on rotation since January 2015. Cherie is a life hacker, professional laundry dodger and mother of two. Read Less

Ask a Question

Close sidebar