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STEPHANIE V. SIEK

Associated Press

ST. LOUIS -- It wasn't long after Joel Pekay's triplets came
home from the hospital that he realized the average retail store's baby
section didn't understand the needs of multiple-birth parents.
He and his wife shared caretaking duties with grandparents
and a nursing staff, but no store offered the family a product to help
them organize which baby's needs had been taken care of, and at what
time.
By the time the triplets were 3 weeks old, Pekay had
developed Baby Log, a spiral-bound checklist.
"When there are people helping out, you don't always know
what's going on. You're at work, you come home, and you don't know (things
like) how much did Alec eat, how much did Shayna eat, did they eat enough,
do they need a Tylenol," Pekay said.
Baby Log became more than an aid for the Pekays -- Joel
Pekay decided to sell it to other parents, via the Internet and his
personal Web site, www.tripletpress.com.
Twins, triplets, quadruplets and even larger multiple births
present huge challenges to parents, because products designed for single
babies are often of little help.
But some of these parents find an opportunity as they try to
cope -- like Pekay, they end up inventing products to help make child care
easier, and that other multiple-birth parents are eager to buy.
More Than One Inc., started in 1995 by Angela Pacey and her
husband, offers nearly 300 products for parents of twins, triplets and
more. Pacey said the business has grown exponentially, and now earns more
than $1 million in sales each year through its catalog and Web site,
www.morethanone.com.
The Web site offers products such as strollers for triplets,
quads or quints; toddler tables that can seat up to eight children and
dividers that allow more than one baby to sleep in a single crib.
The company recently expanded into manufacturing by
purchasing a company that made the Anna Nursing Pillow, which allows
mothers to breastfeed two babies at once. That product was invented by a
mother of twins.
Many of the products More Than One offers for parents of
multiples were not invented by parents, but rather relatives watching the
parents struggle to keep up.
"We're too busy just trying to get through the day," said
Pacey, who is also a mother of twins. "It's often a family member that
comes up with something."
Many of these parent/inventors were showing their products
recently at a convention in St. Louis for families of triplets,
quadruplets and more.
The market for multiple-baby products isn't as large as the
general baby goods market, but there is still a demand for the unique
products.
In 2002, the most recent year for which data were available,
125,134 babies born in the United States were twins, according to the
National Center for Health Statistics. In the same year, there were 7,401
babies born as part of a set of triplets, quadruplets, or other
multiple-births.
That's a slight decrease from 1998, when the number of
higher-order multiple births peaked at 7,625, fueled in part by the
popularity of fertility drugs and treatments. |