Baby boom in Western NY 9 months after last November's snowstorms

Aug 13, 2015 - 07:03
Aug 13, 2015 - 07:05
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Baby boom in Western NY 9 months after last November's snowstorms
In this photo taken Aug 11, 2015, and provided by Mercy Hospital of Buffalo, Stephanie and Jason Brueggeman pose with their newborn daughter at the hospital in Buffalo, N.Y. Jason planned to drop his wife at work and then head to work himself until waking

Snowed in and scrambling during a freak storm in November, Mary Ann Murphy predicted there would be another flurry of activity in, oh, about nine months, at the Buffalo hospital where she's in charge of mateity services.

Sure enough, a mini baby boom has begun and hospital officials say they expect to deliver about 250 babies before August is through, up from the usual 200 or so.

"Several months ago, I looked at our nurse manager and said: 'We better buy more cribs,'" Murphy said at Mercy Hospital in south Buffalo, where a jaw-dropping 7 feet of snow fell during the week before Thanksgiving.

The hospital serves the areas hardest hit by the Lake Erie-driven storm — and it has seen weather-related peaks in births before.

"Nowhere to go, nothing to do," is how Jason and Stephanie Brueggeman describe that week, when it was so snowy that a village plow got stuck in front of their Lancaster home and the pile it had been pushing sat there for days. They welcomed daughter Grace Elizabeth this week, saying they're glad she came a little early and let them avoid the rush.

"Next week, from August 17 to August 22, will mark the official nine-month anniversary of the storm that trapped people inside for days," according to a Syracuse news source.

"The amazing thing is, Mary Ann usually does maybe six deliveries a day, on average," Mercy Hospital President and Chief Executive C.J. Urlaub said. "We've already had three days that we've had 14 and 16 deliveries."

A spokesman for Buffalo's Women & Children's Hospital said the staff there is anticipating a busy month as well.

Since the baby business is generally unpredictable, hospitals plan for its ebb and flow. Most members of Mercy's obstetrics staff are able to shift among units to accommodate needs, and they know where to put extra beds as patient rooms fill up, the officials said.

"We have contingencies," Murphy said. "And we have employed all of those contingencies in the past couple of weeks and we'll continue through the month of August."

As for the Brueggemans, there's no urge to nickname their baby "Stormy" or change the nursery color palette to white.

"It's already green and pink," the new mom said.

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Mike Gallagher Freelance writer with a passion for travelling