A sign of the recession's toll: Births fall in Illinois
Economically stressed families put off having kids
By Judith Graham and Tara Malone, Chicago Tribune reporters
August 25, 2010
After the tumult of losing a job, searching for new  employment and relocating to the Chicago area, the Hurleys of Naperville  decided not to have any more children.
"We're done," said Tracy Hurley, a stay-at-home mom with a 3-year-old and a 1 1/2-year-old.
Their decision is apparently becoming more common. The birth rate in  Illinois has dropped to its lowest level since 1933, the height of the  Great Depression, in part because financially stressed couples are  putting off or deciding against expanding their families.
"Many couples are strained and don't want to take on additional  responsibilities," said Dr. Kishore Lakhani, an obstetrics and  gynecology specialist who practices in Hoffman Estates.
"Especially people who are working, if they already have a child, they  are deciding to continue taking birth control," said Dr. Vijay  Arekapudi, chairwoman of the OB/GYN department at the Division Street  campus of Sts. Mary and Elizabeth Medical Center.
Illinois' birth rate stands at about 13.3 for every 1,000 people in the  state, down from a recent high of 17.1 per 1,000 residents in 1990,  according to a Tribune analysis of Census Bureau population figures and  local birth data. In 1933, the rate was 13.9.  Read More
 
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