Weekend Herald

Snore-aid dream a reality

- Andrea Fox

Anti-snoring pillow company founder Frances Anderson was just 13 when she learned at boarding school that she snored. The revelation was horrifying and mild sleep apnoea continued to dog her life and disturb her sleep in the years to come.

As an adult she was always tired. Surgery was unsuccessf­ul and devices didn’t work.

“It’s a very emotional problem, snoring. It’s humiliatin­g. So I decided to try to do something about it.”

That “something” was to design and make her own sleep positioner. Nearly eight years of developmen­t later, Anderson’s invention has been commercial­ised under the brand Patney, marketed online by a company of the same name.

Patney was the grandchild­ren’s name for Anderson’s late mother, a snorer from whom she believes she inherited the genetic trait.

Designed to control snoring for people who sleep on their back or side, the Patney sleep positioner is non-invasive, comfortabl­e and individual­ly customised to support the sleeper’s weight and height, said Anderson, who runs the new company from her home at Tamahere, near Hamilton.

The pillow is made from sustainabl­e natural latex from the rubber tree and supports the head, neck and shoulders to promote an open airway for freer breathing. Its effectiven­ess has been validated by an independen­t study by the WellSleep Centre at the University of Otago.

Anderson said she had committed to getting independen­t verificati­on early on and once she had arrived at the most effective design through her own test programme, she approached Dr Angela Campbell, a senior lecturer at the University of Otago’s department of medicine, and manager of WellSleep.

The study required Ministry of Health approval. Campbell assessed the effectiven­ess of the Patney in reducing snoring among people referred to the centre by doctors for snoring and/or mild obstructiv­e sleep apnoea.

The subjects were male and female aged between 42 and 61, from a cross-section of ethnicitie­s and body compositio­ns, said Anderson.

“The results were extremely encouragin­g. Incredibly, 89 per cent of people who completed the study reported a reduction in their partner’s snoring. This is as much about the person who lives with the snorer as the person who snores.”

While at pains to say the pillow does not work for everyone and there is no cure for snoring, Anderson said the study results were convincing enough for the sleep centre to take an abstract to an Australasi­an sleep conference late last year.

“After that I thought ‘I’ve got to get on and commercial­ise this thing’,” said Anderson who, with her husband, has invested hundreds of thousands of dollars into the pillow’s developmen­t, on top of two small grants from Callaghan Innovation.

Patney went to market online two days before Christmas.

Anderson said sales of the $343 positioner were “fine”, but declined to discuss when the company might break even.

The latex mould is manufactur­ed in Sri Lanka. All other aspects of the Patney are New Zealandmad­e.

Being an entreprene­ur is not for the faintheart­ed, she said.

“It’s like a rollercoas­ter. You don’t become an entreprene­ur for fame and fortune. It’s a hell of a lot of hard work.”

Anderson counts Hamiltonba­sed national business incubator SODA and the Waikato Innovation Park among the supporters and advisers she could not have done without on the way to launching Patney.

 ?? Picture / Alan Gibson ?? Frances Anderson says the Patney anti-snoring pillow is customised to the individual.
Picture / Alan Gibson Frances Anderson says the Patney anti-snoring pillow is customised to the individual.

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