The newborn girls were born at the Mercy Hospital in Melbourne and were then cared for at Northeast Health Wangaratta before being able to join their parents and older siblings at home in Bundalong.
Layla, Meredith and Audrey were born at 33 weeks and one day after Sophie required an emergency caesarean.
The triplets spent a week in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit before being moved to the special care nursery and were transferred to Northeast Health on April 24 by the Paediatric Infant Perinatal Emergency Retrieval (PIPER) service.
Mum Sophie said she was grateful to have her girls home after they were discharged on May 3.
“The girls are all going well and we’ve been very lucky that they have exceeded expectations in their first few months,” Mrs Pickering said.
“They were on CPAP machines to assist their breathing at the start but were able to get off those quite quickly and took to the bottles really well.
“I’ve started to combine feeding so we will see how we go.”
Mr and Mrs Pickering have two older sons, aged eleven and nine and said they were thrilled to have three sisters join their family.
“The boys are really happy that they now have three little sisters,” Mrs Pickering said.
“It’s going to be a full house but I’m excited about all that lies ahead, even if it’s a little daunting.”
Mrs Pickering was referred to Melbourne for special care throughout her pregnancy given the risk level associated with multiple births, with her care managed between Yarrawonga, the Mercy and Wangaratta.
“I was referred very early in the pregnancy to Melbourne and travelled every two to three weeks to the Mercy, while seeing an obstetrician in Yarrawonga in-between,” Mrs Pickering said.
Northeast Health Wangaratta Maternity ward Nurse Unit Manager, Emma said that while the work to prepare for the transfer of the triplets was significant, the opportunity to care for the newborns and Sophie had been a lovely and unique experience for the team of midwives and SCN nurses.
“We have capacity for six in the special care nursery, so we did a lot of logistical planning to ensure we could safely care for the triplets and other women in labour over the same period,” Emma said.
“Sophie was fantastic, she managed really well and took on a lot of the day duties herself.
“Given our bed numbers and demand, Sophie wasn’t able to stay with her babies, so we juggled the night feeds when mum was at home and it was so lovely having them here – you can see how cute they are.
“We know Sophie was really looking forward to having her family back together and we supported their transition home as soon as the bubs were ready.”
Mrs Pickering said although she is feeling tired, she is glad the family is back in their own surroundings and was grateful to the NHW midwives and nurses for their round-the-clock care.
“The midwives and nurses were all fantastic, so incredibly helpful and wonderful with the girls,” Mrs Pickering said.
“It’s made the transition really enjoyable, and meeting with the lactation consultant and receiving tips from the midwives has helped me get a plan together for how to manage feeding and the juggle at home.
“We’ll draw on our past experience and the advice provided by others to find what works for us.
“We’ve had a team of family and friends on standby for when the girls were discharged, so we’re really looking forward to our lives as a family of seven.”