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Media Contacts: Jeffree Itrich (619) 543-6163
At approximately 8:30 p.m. on January 1st, a four pound boy was delivered. The next morning at 7 a.m. the team delivered a set of twins. A couple of hours later, triplets emerged, and three hours later, a set of quadruplets was born. All small and premature, the ten children were taken to the Infant Special Care Center for individualized care. When Dr. Brian Lane, a UCSD neonatology fellow who assisted in stabilization of the numerous births realized what was happening he remarked, “we just hit for the cycle,” referring to the rare occurrence when a baseball player hits a single, double, triple and home run all in the same game.
Each year UCSD Medical Center delivers approximately 3,000 babies a year, about six to eight births per day. As referral center for high-risk pregnancy cases, UCSD admits about 25% of its newborns into the Infant Special Care Center for specialized follow-up due to prematurity and other complications.
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