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Twin and triplet births are on the decline. Here's how it breaks down by state.

Cassidy Grom on

Published in Slideshow World

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Twin and triplet births are on the decline. Here's how it breaks down by state.

Twins, triplets, and other multiples have long caught the attention of "singletons," or those of us born without a built-in best friend by our sides. Twins—and the media—annually descend on Twinsburg, Ohio, for the Twins Days Festival; quintuplets get a shout-out in their local paper when they graduate from the same college; and who could forget "Jon & Kate Plus 8," the TV show that followed every twist and turn of a family with sextuplets.

After the 1981 introduction of in vitro fertilization and other assisted reproductive technology, twin and multiple births skyrocketed in the United States. Dr. Zev Williams of the Columbia University Fertility Center told CNN over 8 million babies have been born using IVF, or about 2% of all U.S. births, as of February 2024. In those early years of the technology, IVF procedures often resulted in the birth of multiples. That's because physicians commonly implanted several embryos with the understanding that some may not grow into fetuses.

With new and improved technology, however, fewer embryos have to be transferred during ART, resulting in fewer multiple births in recent years. While that means fewer people celebrating National Triplet Day (on March 3, of course), it also means better health outcomes for mothers and children.

Northwell Health partnered with Stacker to examine the decline of multiple births in the U.S. using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Visit thestacker.com for similar lists and stories.


 

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