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Anticipating Baby
The Unexpected Cost of Parenthood
By Jenn Director Knudsen
"On average, it is said that roughly $8,000 is spent on a baby in its first year of life," says Christine K. Walker, author of The Smart Mom's Guide to Staying at Home: 65 Simple Ways to Thrive, Not Deprive, on One Income (Trafford Publishing, 2004) and a mother of three children. And that's once your new son or daughter is born. Hospital costs – for the birth and immediate postpartum and baby care – may further whittle away at your wallet.
Yet experts caution that not all births are routine, nor, unfortunately, are all babies born healthy; some require immediate medical intervention or even a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) stay. Children younger than 1 year make up only 1 percent of the U.S. population, but they account for approximately 13 percent of all hospital stays, according to a fact book put out by the U.S. government's Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). The AHRQ also finds the vast majority of these stays are newborn infants, and that neonates account for seven times more hospital stays than any other pediatric age group (children through age 17).
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