1,000 New People Arrive in Texas Every Day. Half Are Newborns. [View all]
A surge in births in Texas comes amid a declining birthrate nationwide.
SAN ANTONIO Every three minutes, a child is born somewhere in Texas.
At one hospital in North Texas, 107 babies were delivered over 96 hours this summer, shattering local records. At a hospital in San Antonio, more than 1,200 babies have been born this year, up nearly 30 percent since 2018.
Across one of the nations fastest-growing states, an average 1,000 new Texans arrive every day. Half of them are newborns.
Our population is going up. So just with that, I would expect our birthrates to increase, said Shad Deering, a department chair with the Childrens Hospital of San Antonio. We will become very busy. . .
Across the state, a baby boom has been fueled by newcomers from states like California and New York, attracted by a lower cost of living, less crowded schools and cheaper taxes. Many of them are starting their own families in the process, experts said.
We have a higher proportion of population in the reproductive years, said Lloyd Potter, a state demographer and professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
Between 2010 and 2020, the states population grew by four million or the entire population of neighboring Oklahoma. Babies made up the largest number of new arrivals to Texas (about 48 percent), with migrants from other states (31 percent) and countries (21 percent) rounding out the rest.
And hospitals are trying to keep up.
It has not slowed down, said Michelle Stemley, vice president of patient care at Baylor Scott & White All Saints Medical Center in Fort Worth, which broke its four-day delivery record this summer.
The surge in births comes amid a declining birthrate nationwide. Couples have waited longer to have children, a trend that continued during the coronavirus pandemic and an uncertain economy, Mr. Potter said.
But a spike in sales of pregnancy tests a 13 percent increase since June of last year may signal that a so-called millennial baby boom may be on the horizon, according to Nielsens data and Bank of Americas research.
Many longtime Texans are contributing to the uptick in tiny new residents. . .
Oliver Noteware, 34, and Kathryn Adkins, 33, grew up in Houston and attended the same elementary school. They fell out of touch for two decades but reconnected in New York, where they ran into each other on the streets of downtown Manhattan.
As the coronavirus tore through the city, they decided, like thousands of others, to try their luck elsewhere. They settled in San Antonio, where Southern manners has made it easier for them to meet new people. We actually know our neighbors here, she said. . .'
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/26/us/texas-newborns-birthrate.html