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Others in Mississippi apparently share her hesitation. As its unemployment rate began to climb closer to double digits, the state saw a 3.9 percent drop in the number of babies born during the year, steepest in the nation. Neighboring Louisiana was second, down 3.6 percent. All told, 13 states reported having fewer babies in 2008. On the other end of the scale, North Dakota -- historically noted for losing rather than gaining population
-- registered a 3.6 percent increase in the number of babies, as young workers flocked to the state's booming oil patch. "North Dakota's economy is in better condition than some other parts of the country, and that may have had an impact," said Shannon Bradley, an obstetrician at the Mid Dakota Clinic in Bismarck. "I think people who aren't faced with economic troubles are more apt to be open to the financial decision of having a baby."
North Dakota has lost residents through the past two decades but might have turned the corner last year. As employers scrambled to fill 15,000 new jobs, the state registered a net increase of 122 new people moving to the state
-- "a lot for North Dakota," said Richard Rathge, state demographer. Through the end of 2007, it was a good month if the Mid Dakota Clinic delivered 100 babies. But the numbers began to climb in 2008, and the clinic now averages between 110 and 120 births per month, said Lisa Kozel, a pediatrician. While the state's growing economy was probably a factor, a harsh Dakota winter may have helped business, she added. "I'm sure people were probably staying indoors more," Kozel said. ___ On the Net: Census Bureau: http://www.census.gov/ National Center for Health Statistics:
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/
[Associated
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