No rush of New Year’s babies
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Greg Risling
NEWPORT BEACH -- The big push by parents to claim stake to the first baby
of the new millennium has gone virtually unnoticed at Hoag Hospital.
Doctors were concerned earlier this year that a flood of families would
try to get pregnant around April in the hope of bearing a child at the
end of this year.
Much like the reports of people staying at home for New Year’s Eve
instead of paying exorbitant costs to party, hospital officials aren’t
reporting a rise in expected deliveries over the holiday weekend.
At a hospital that averages more than 4,000 deliveries a year, some Hoag
doctors believe they will see a reduction, rather than an increase, in
New Year’s births.
“We’re not expecting a high volume of deliveries,” said Dr. Jonathan
Wheeler, chairman of Hoag’s obstetrics and gynecology department. “Most
of our patients are staying away from all of the hype. I think it was
blown a little out of proportion.”
Although Hoag doctors are expecting only about 10 to 15 deliveries this
weekend, it didn’t stop them from planning ahead. They checked with other
hospitals to see whether an influx of pregnancies has happened this year.
In September, Hoag staffers contacted families’ personal physicians to
determine if they would see a rise in deliveries.
Wheeler said there are many factors working against families planning for
a timely birth. First and foremost, most women don’t get pregnant the
first try. It typically takes an average of three to six tries before a
couple is successful.
Also, Newport tends to have a population base that is older than its
Orange County neighbors. Older women tend to have lower pregnancy rates
than younger ones, Wheeler added.
“I think the number of deliveries will go up around springtime because
the inception occurred two to three months later than they had planned,”
he said.
Parents expecting during the holiday season have taken doctors updates in
stride, Wheeler added. None of Hoag’s patients have been overeager to
take such measures as inducing labor to meet the year-end deadline.
“Here in Newport, they are a different crowd,” Wheeler said. “They tend
to shy away from any publicity.”
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