To prevent a medical shortage caused by the high number of
births expected in the auspicious Year of the (Golden) Pig,
Beijing's health authority has suggested expectant mothers steer
clear of the top hospitals to avoid overloading them.
But Xiao Xun, head of the Women's and Children's Affairs
Division under the Beijing Health Bureau, said the city has
sufficient obstetrics resources, going on the current birth
rate.
Xiao said the city currently has 3,800 beds and 3,000 medical
workers available in its 170 obstetrics departments and
hospitals.
"The difficulty is that many pregnant women only choose a few
top hospitals to have physical checks and deliver, while the other
hospitals have beds available," Xiao was quoted by the Beijing
Times as saying.
Xiao said the auspicious Year of the (Golden) Pig had fueled the
birth rate this year, and Beijing expected a total of 150,000
babies to be born in 2007, compared with 129,000 in 2006.
The lunar calendar designates one of 12 zodiac signs to each year. The years also
rotate through five elements gold, wood, water, fire and earth.
In 2007, the Year of the Pig coincides with the element of gold.
It is said children born in this year are blessed with a carefree
life.
This notion has sparked a baby boom across the country.
Qian Hailin, a 23-year-old in Shanghai due to give birth in May,
said she had no intention of becoming a mother at such a young age,
but her family decided the Year of the (Golden) Pig would be the
luckiest for her to have a baby.
The baby boom has already put hospitals and doctors on alert in
major cities.
The delivery rooms in major hospitals in Shanghai have been
fully booked until March, although some are squeezing up to six
expectant mothers into a room designed for four, and will cut short
the hospitalization period.
Experts warned that irrational family planning would result in a
shortage of social resources.
"Given China's large population, selective birth in so-called
lucky years may worsen the existing shortage of social resources,
including education and employment," Ren said.
Ren's contention is backed by the shortage of education
resources last year caused by the baby boom in 2000.
(China Daily February 3, 2007)