Rotunda Hospital
The Rotunda Hospital is a maternity hospital situated on Parnell Square in Dublin, Ireland, established in 1745 by surgeon Bartholomew Mosse as the Dublin Lying-In Hospital, the world's first dedicated institution for maternity training.[1] Relocating to its present location north of O'Connell Street in 1757, it has delivered continuous obstetric and gynaecological care, earning distinction as the longest continuously operating maternity hospital globally.[1] As a 198-bed teaching hospital affiliated with the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, the Rotunda provides comprehensive services including antenatal care, labour and delivery support, neonatal intensive care for approximately 10% of births involving premature or low-birth-weight infants, and gynaecological treatments for reproductive health issues.[2] In 2023, it managed nearly 10,000 pregnancies and delivered 8,442 babies, underscoring its role in serving a significant portion of Dublin's maternity needs.[3] The hospital's historical contributions to medical training and its pioneering electronic maternity records system highlight advancements in obstetric practice, while the adjacent Rotunda Chapel remains a cultural landmark.[1][4] Notable achievements include receiving the Irish Healthcare Awards' Maternity Hospital of the Year in 2013 and maintaining an unbroken service record amid evolving healthcare demands.[5]Historical Development
Founding and Establishment (1745–1800)
The Rotunda Hospital originated as the Dublin Lying-In Hospital, founded on 15 March 1745 by Dr. Bartholomew Mosse, a surgeon and man-midwife, as the first maternity training hospital in Europe.[1] Mosse established the initial facility in a small 10-bed hospital on George's Lane in Dublin, motivated by the high rates of maternal and infant mortality and the prevalence of abandoned orphans in 18th-century Ireland.[6] The hospital admitted its first patient, Judith Rochford, who delivered a baby boy on 20 March 1745.[5] To fund expansion, Mosse organized concerts featuring Handel oratorios, theatrical performances raising approximately £330 in 1746, and lotteries that generated over £11,000 by 1753.[5] In 1748, he leased four acres on Great Britain Street (now Parnell Street) for a permanent site, including pleasure gardens for public revenue.[5] Construction began after consulting architect Richard Cassels in 1750, with the foundation stone laid on 4 June 1751 by the Lord Mayor of Dublin.[5] A royal charter granted in 1756 established a board of governors and a seven-year mastership system for medical leadership.[5] The new facility, renamed the New Lying-In Hospital, opened on 8 December 1757 under the auspices of the Lord Lieutenant, at a total cost exceeding £20,000.[5] Mosse died on 16 February 1759, succeeded as master by Sir Fielding Ould.[5] Early institutional growth included the opening of a chapel in 1762, which by 1765 generated £8,000 annually from public assemblies.[5] Formal midwifery lectures commenced in 1774 under Dr. David MacBride, and in 1783 Joseph Clarke was appointed assistant master, introducing ventilation improvements in 1784.[5] By 1800, the hospital had solidified its role as a pioneering institution for obstetrical care and training in Ireland.[1]Expansion and Institutional Growth (19th Century)
In the early 19th century, the Rotunda Hospital expanded its physical footprint through strategic property acquisitions to accommodate growing demand. Between 1812 and 1815, the hospital purchased land from the Richmond National Institution for the Blind for £4,000, converting it into an auxiliary facility with 18 to 20 beds, which was later integrated into the hospital grounds.[7] By 1815, annual deliveries exceeded 3,000 for the first time, reflecting institutional maturation amid Dublin's urban population pressures.[7] Mid-century developments focused on specialized care amid challenges like puerperal fever epidemics. In 1835, under Master Evory Kennedy (1833–1840), the hospital established its first gynaecological unit, marking a shift toward broader obstetric and surgical services.[8] Hygiene reforms by Master Robert Collins (1826–1833), including enforced cleaning protocols, reduced infection rates and informed his 1835 treatise on midwifery, which drew international acclaim for its statistical rigor.[8] In 1845, a legacy of £500 from Richard Cave funded an additional ward in the auxiliary hospital, enhancing capacity during Masters' tenures that averaged 13,000–14,000 deliveries per seven-year term by the 1840s.[7] Late-century growth emphasized infrastructure and clinical innovation. In 1876–1877, public donations, including £568 from a bazaar, financed a new out-patient department costing over £2,000, alongside structural upgrades.[7] Master Lombe Atthill (1875–1882) launched a domiciliary delivery service in 1877, extending care beyond inpatient walls and training midwives more systematically.[8] By 1882, Master Henry Macan (1882–1889) implemented antiseptic protocols, such as carbolic acid handwashing and student restrictions, yielding a maternal mortality rate of 0.55% in 1883 with no sepsis deaths in the final 18 months.[7] The pivotal 1895 opening of the Thomas Plunket Cairns Wing, built for £9,600 after tenders accepted in 1892, added an operating theatre, gynaecological wards, and nurses' quarters, directly addressing operative needs.[7][8] Administrative evolution supported this expansion. In 1891, the matron position was replaced by a Lady Superintendent and housekeeper, streamlining nursing oversight.[7] Master Richard Dancer Purefoy (1896–1903) established the first pathological laboratory in 1896, advancing diagnostics, while district services reported 12,811 deliveries by that year.[8] These changes, funded by parliamentary grants (e.g., £2,619 annually from 1808) and pupil fees, sustained growth despite epidemics, with overall maternal mortality declining from 2.16% in 1803 to under 2% by the 1870s through evidence-based practices.[7][8]20th Century Reforms and Challenges
In the early 20th century, the Rotunda Hospital grappled with significant challenges in infant health, including elevated stillbirth rates averaging 4.2% from birth records spanning 1869–1930, with disparities pronounced in disadvantaged Dublin areas where rates reached 6.8% compared to 3.3% in less deprived zones, reflecting socioeconomic factors such as urban overcrowding, poor sanitation, and occupational class differences.[9] These issues were compounded by broader urban penalties, including gastroenteritis epidemics and higher mortality among unmarried mothers (5.6% stillbirth rate versus 4.2% for married), underscoring the hospital's role in serving a vulnerable, low-income population amid limited public health infrastructure.[9] Mid-century reforms addressed staffing and medical practices, with the 1953 Health Act enabling the introduction of consultants and registrars under Master E.W.L. Thompson (1952–1959), enhancing professional oversight and training.[5] However, gross overcrowding emerged as a persistent challenge by 1967, prompting Master E.W. Lillie (1967–1973) to propose a five-story extension, while in 1974 a temporary annexe was established at the former Drumcondra District Hospital to manage excess postpartum patients.[5] The district maternity service, which had handled 12,811 deliveries under Master Dancer Purefoy (1896–1903), was suspended in 1975 due to safety concerns under Master I.J. Dalrymple (1974–1980).[5] Later reforms focused on technological and infrastructural advancements to mitigate ongoing pressures, including the 1936 adoption of sulphonamides that curtailed puerperal fever incidence, the 1977 rollout of ultrasound diagnostics and genetic counseling, and the 1985 establishment of a Fetal Assessment Unit.[5] A 1993 three-story extension, featuring a modern delivery suite and theaters, addressed capacity constraints, coinciding with record-low perinatal mortality rates under Master Michael Darling (1988–1994).[5] Funding for initiatives like the 1936 Nurses’ Home, later repurposed as a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit in 1979, relied on sources such as the Hospital Sweepstakes Trust, highlighting the voluntary hospital's dependence on philanthropy amid gradual state integration.[5]Post-Independence Era to Present
Following the establishment of the Irish Free State in 1922, the Rotunda Hospital persisted in its foundational mission of providing maternity services and medical training, undeterred by the ensuing Civil War (1922–1923), during which it admitted patients amid widespread conflict. The institution's location in central Dublin positioned it near key events of the independence struggle, though its primary focus remained clinical operations rather than political involvement.[10] Mid-20th-century reforms emphasized improved obstetrical practices, with notable advancements in care protocols between 1945 and 1995, including the adoption of antibiotics and better antenatal monitoring that contributed to declining maternal and neonatal mortality rates across Irish maternity hospitals. The Rotunda pioneered several national firsts, such as an infertility treatment programme, sperm and egg freezing, and specialized units for high-risk pregnancies, reflecting its role as a leader in evolving midwifery standards.[1] [11] Challenges intensified in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, particularly during Ireland's 2008 financial crisis, when Health Service Executive (HSE) funding cuts and recruitment freezes led to overcrowding and strained resources; former Master Sam Coulter-Smith described operations as "dangerously busy" under bureaucratic constraints that limited staffing and infrastructure upgrades. In 2013, the hospital integrated into the RCSI Hospitals Group, a network combining clinical care, education, and research across Dublin sites to enhance efficiency and outcomes.[12] [13] [14] Recent developments include the rollout of electronic health records via the Maternity and Newborn Clinical Management System in collaboration with HSE Mid West in 2025, alongside digital care innovations like app-based appointment expansions. Professor Seán Daly assumed the role of Master/Chief Executive in January 2023 for a seven-year term, overseeing a 2022–2026 strategic plan focused on integrated care pathways and national maternity strategy alignment. In 2025, the hospital secured additional HSE funding to avert a €6 million shortfall in staffing and operations, while seeking planning reviews for a proposed €100 million wing dedicated to critically ill mothers and neonates amid objection-related delays. The Rotunda handles around 9,000 births yearly, sustaining its affiliation with the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland for training.[15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21]Architectural Features
Original Design by Richard Cassels
The Rotunda Hospital's original building was designed in 1750 by Richard Cassels, a German-born architect prominent in Ireland for introducing Palladianism, at the request of founder Bartholomew Mosse.[22] Cassels drew inspiration from his earlier Leinster House project (1744–1748), adapting the same floor plan to create a more economical structure suited for a public institution while maintaining neoclassical elegance.[23] The design emphasized symmetry, with a central block flanked by wings, featuring a pedimented portico and columnar elements typical of Palladian villas repurposed for urban use.[24] Construction began shortly after the design phase, with the foundation stone laid in the early 1750s, but Cassels died in 1751, leaving completion to his assistants and successors until the hospital opened in its new premises in December 1757.[25] The resulting edifice resembled a grand country mansion more than a utilitarian hospital, a deliberate choice to attract affluent visitors for fundraising events via lotteries and assemblies in adjacent rooms, including the namesake circular Rotunda hall.[24] This opulent appearance, however, prompted contemporary criticism for prioritizing aesthetic grandeur over functional austerity expected of charitable institutions.[24] Key innovations in the layout included smaller wards compared to prevailing larger dormitories, potentially aiding infection control and patient privacy through compartmentalization, though empirical outcomes from this era remain undocumented in primary records.[26] The Palladian facade, with its rusticated base and balustraded roofline, integrated seamlessly into Dublin's emerging Georgian streetscape around Parnell Square, underscoring Cassels' role in shaping the city's architectural identity.[23]Key Structural Elements and Adaptations
The Rotunda Hospital's original structure, completed in 1757, features an eleven-bay, three-storey-over-basement main block constructed in ashlar limestone, with a central pedimented breakfront incorporating an applied Doric portico supported by engaged columns.[27] The hipped slate roof culminates in a copper-domed cupola topped by a ball-capped finial, providing a distinctive campanile element that enhances ventilation and visibility, while the facade employs rusticated limestone at ground level transitioning to smoother ashlar above, with square-headed six-over-six sash windows and Ionic pilasters framing the upper stages.[27] [23] Internally, the design prioritized infection control through smaller wards clustered around a central circular rotunda room—approximately 50 feet in diameter with a coffered dome—flanked by Doric columns in the entrance hall and groin-vaulted corridors, reflecting Richard Cassels' adaptation of his Leinster House prototype for medical utility over grandeur.[23] [8] The adjacent chapel, integral to the complex since its 1762 completion, employs a rectangular plan with Baroque stucco ornamentation, including rococo gilt plasterwork depicting Faith, Hope, and Charity, Corinthian-columned galleries, and a prominent Venetian window, all funded through public subscriptions to support hospital operations.[23] [8] Quadrant colonnades link the main block to ancillary wings, originally enclosing pleasure gardens for revenue generation, with later additions by architects like James Gandon incorporating a sculpted frieze and theatre entrance to the east.[23] Adaptations began early with practical modifications for hygiene, such as the addition of ventilation holes to ward doors in 1784 to improve airflow and reduce disease transmission in the confined wards.[8] The 1895 Thomas Plunkett Cairns Wing introduced an operating theatre and nurses' quarters, marking the first major structural expansion to accommodate surgical needs and staff housing without altering the core Georgian facade.[8] Subsequent 20th-century changes included a 1907 nurses' home (repurposed as a neonatal unit in 1979), a 1936 replacement funded by the Hospital Sweepstakes, and a 1993 three-storey extension adding a dedicated delivery suite and twin operating theatres to the rear, preserving the original envelope while enhancing clinical capacity.[8] A 2003 paediatric and neonatal intensive care unit followed, integrated into existing wings, and a 2021 three-storey addition focused on emergency and delivery facilities, featuring modern materials like frameless glass alongside granite cladding to align with the historic streetscape.[8] [28] These incremental modifications maintained the site's protected status, prioritizing functional upgrades over aesthetic overhaul, with non-medical elements like the rotunda assembly rooms repurposed as the Gate Theatre after ceasing entertainment use in the early 20th century.[23]Integration with Surrounding Buildings
The Rotunda Hospital integrates architecturally with its surrounding complex through attached entertainment buildings originally designed to fund hospital operations via public events. Constructed between 1751 and 1757 under the oversight of architect Richard Cassels, the core hospital structure features an applied Doric portico on Parnell Street, flanked by eleven-bay wings that connect to quadrant colonnades and a central cupola.[27] These elements link the hospital to adjacent assembly rooms added eastward in 1764 by John Ensor, forming a cohesive ensemble amid planned pleasure gardens modeled after London's Vauxhall Gardens.[21][23] Physically connected via linking corridors and shared facades, the assembly rooms—including the Round Room and Supper Room—provided revenue-generating spaces for concerts and assemblies directly supporting the hospital's charitable mission from its founding in 1757.[29] Over subsequent centuries, these integrated spaces evolved: the Supper Room became the Gate Theatre in 1928, while the Assembly Hall transitioned to the Ambassador Theatre Group venue, preserving the complex's multifunctional layout without severing structural ties to the hospital.[21] In Dublin's Georgian urban fabric, the Rotunda's Parnell Street frontage aligns with adjacent period buildings, contributing to the streetscape's continuity despite later additions like the 1895 nurses' home on Parnell Square West. Modern enhancements, including a post-2010 emergency entrance expansion extending to the street line beneath a suspended glass canopy, prioritize pedestrian access while respecting the historic envelope.[28][30] Proposed extensions, such as a 2025 four-storey critical care wing along the western park boundary, aim to augment capacity amid ongoing urban pressures without disrupting the site's architectural coherence.[31]Clinical Services and Operations
Core Maternity and Delivery Services
The Rotunda Hospital delivers core maternity services centered on antenatal monitoring, labour support, and childbirth, handling approximately 8,442 births in 2023 while providing care to nearly 10,000 pregnant women annually.[32] Public patients receive free antenatal consultations in the hospital's outpatient department, with midwife-led assessments supplemented by obstetric input as needed.[33] Labour and delivery occur in a dedicated suite featuring single-occupancy birthing rooms designed for comfort, including dimmed lighting and labouring aids, alongside one specialized room equipped with a pool for water immersion during labour.[34] Midwives serve as primary caregivers during labour, conducting continuous fetal monitoring via cardiotocography (CTG), Doppler ultrasound, or Pinard stethoscope, with one designated birth partner permitted for support.[34] Obstetricians, paediatricians, and anaesthetists remain on-site 24/7 to address complications, enabling prompt intervention. Delivery modalities encompass spontaneous vaginal birth, assisted vaginal delivery with vacuum (ventouse) or forceps, and caesarean section—either elective or emergency—based on clinical requirements.[34] Pain management integrates non-pharmacological techniques such as massage, TENS units, and hydrotherapy with pharmacological alternatives, including inhaled Entonox (gas and air), intramuscular pethidine, and epidural analgesia, the latter administered by specialist teams despite potential associations with prolonged second-stage labour or increased assisted delivery rates.[34] Postpartum protocols prioritize skin-to-skin contact for at least 60 minutes, neonatal physical examination, vitamin K prophylaxis, and perineal repair if required, prior to maternal transfer to postnatal wards within two hours under midwife handover.[34] Care models include consultant-led options for higher-risk pregnancies and community-linked schemes such as DOMINO (Domiciliary In and Out Midwifery Scheme) for low-risk cases, facilitating home visits alongside hospital delivery, though the majority of services emphasize hospital-based intrapartum oversight to mitigate risks evidenced by national perinatal data trends.[35]Specialized Units and Innovations
The Rotunda Hospital operates a tertiary-level neonatal unit that provides specialized intensive care for premature and sick infants born at the hospital or transferred from other facilities in the Dublin region, adhering to national standards for neonatologist staffing and nurse-to-baby ratios as outlined in Ireland's Model of Care for Neonatal Services.[36][37] This unit handles high-risk cases, including extreme prematurity and complex medical conditions, with multidisciplinary support including antenatal and postnatal parental counseling.[38][39] In fetal medicine, the hospital maintains a dedicated service for managing high-risk pregnancies, encompassing fetal growth assessments, prenatal diagnosis of anomalies, and interventions for detected illnesses, with contact facilitated through specific referral lines.[40] Complementary specialized clinics include an early pregnancy unit for initial assessments and monitoring, a colposcopy clinic for cervical evaluations, and community midwifery services extending outpatient support.[2] The hospital is also advancing coordinated gynaecology care through a centralized referral and triage system for benign conditions in north Dublin, aimed at streamlining access and reducing fragmentation.[41] Innovations at the Rotunda emphasize digital and research-driven enhancements to maternity and neonatal care. The hospital became Ireland's first stand-alone facility to implement a fully electronic maternity and neonatal clinical management system (MN-CMS) in 2017, enabling comprehensive digital records to improve efficiency and decision-making.[4] In the same year, the Rotunda Innovation Unit and Hub were established to foster ground-breaking ideas in maternal and infant care, building on the hospital's historical role in obstetrics.[42] Recent infrastructure upgrades include two new operating theatres launched on March 3, 2022, to bolster surgical capacity for obstetrics and gynaecology.[43] Research initiatives, led through the RCSI Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at the Rotunda, focus on empirical advancements such as optimizing labour induction protocols to enhance outcomes and alleviate service pressures, alongside studies on intrauterine growth restriction, twin discordance, and platelet roles in obstetric complications.[44][45][46] A 2023 digital transformation effort introduced the PregCare model, a hybrid e-health perinatal intervention for low-risk pregnancies integrating multidisciplinary monitoring to promote proactive care.[47] In February 2025, a partnership with Isla Health was announced to pioneer digital maternity innovations, targeting improved patient engagement and data-driven perinatal health.[16] Neonatal research continues to explore long-term outcomes, including post-pandemic effects via projects like FLORAL.[48]Patient Demographics and Access
The Rotunda Hospital primarily serves pregnant women from its catchment area in north inner-city Dublin and adjacent regions, reflecting an urban population with elevated rates of socioeconomic deprivation. In 2023, it cared for nearly 10,000 pregnant women and delivered 8,442 babies, positioning it as Ireland's busiest maternity hospital and handling a disproportionate share of complex cases, including approximately 10% of births requiring neonatal unit admission, often involving preterm infants under 32 weeks gestation or weighing less than 1,500 grams.[3][2] Patient demographics feature a broad age range, with historical data indicating higher-than-national-average teenage pregnancies; during 1993–1997, the hospital managed 2,228 teenage deliveries, comprising 17.2% of Ireland's total for that cohort.[49] Contemporary trends include a rising incidence of advanced maternal age, with women aged 40–50 routinely accessing care, often linked to fertility treatments and associated complications in about 95% of such cases.[50] Ethnically, the patient base has diversified, with a documented increase in non-Irish nationals booking prenatal care from 2015 onward, mirroring Ireland's immigration-driven shifts and necessitating adapted services for multicultural needs.[51] Access to care occurs via public referral pathways under the Health Service Executive (HSE), where general practitioners direct women for early antenatal booking, prioritizing low-risk community midwife-led models or hospital-based consultant oversight for higher-risk profiles.[52] Public services are free at the point of delivery for eligible residents meeting HSE criteria, though the hospital's capacity as a tertiary center accommodates inter-hospital transfers and regional referrals beyond its core north Dublin zone.[53] Private and semi-private options, funded by insurance or out-of-pocket payments, offer consultant-led delivery and upgraded accommodations, with advance deposits required for non-insured semi-private stays.[54] Targeted programs enhance equity for marginalized groups, such as Roma women facing barriers like precarious housing and discrimination, through multifaceted outreach including interpreter services and social support.[55]Performance Metrics and Outcomes
Historical Maternal and Neonatal Mortality Data
In the 18th century, maternal mortality rates at the Rotunda Hospital ranged from 7 to 11 deaths per 1,000 births, reflecting the era's limited understanding of puerperal fever and antisepsis.[56] Rates remained elevated into the early 19th century, averaging approximately 13 per 1,000 during the 1830s and 1840s.[57] Mid-century conditions worsened, with an average of 30.8 per 1,000 from 1838 to 1860, escalating to 34 per 1,000 in 1861–1868 amid overcrowding, poor hygiene, and infectious outbreaks.[56] Adoption of antiseptic techniques contributed to sharp declines thereafter, reaching 6.2 per 1,000 in 1880–1887 and 0.5 per 1,000 in 1893–1903.[56] By the 1930s and 1940s, rates had fallen to less than half of early 20th-century levels, driven by improved obstetrics and antibiotics.[58] Between 1987 and 1991, only one maternal death occurred.[58] Modern records indicate zero direct maternal deaths annually from 2016 to 2021, though four were reported in 2022—the first in seven years—potentially linked to complex cases in a high-volume unit handling diverse demographics.[59][60]| Period/Years | Maternal Mortality Rate (per 1,000 births) |
|---|---|
| 18th Century | 7–11 |
| 1830s | 13.3 |
| 1840s | 13.0 |
| 1838–1860 | 30.8 |
| 1861–1868 | 34 |
| 1880–1887 | 6.2 |
| 1893–1903 | 0.5 |
| 2016–2021 | 0 (direct deaths) |
| 2022 | 4 deaths (rate not specified) |
| Year/Period | Uncorrected Perinatal Mortality Rate (per 1,000 births) | Corrected Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-1983 | >10 | N/A |
| 1992 | 10.2 | N/A |
| 2002 | 8.3 | N/A |
| 2005 | 9.8 | N/A |
| 2020 | 6.0 | 2.9 |
| 2023 | 4.6 | 2.4 |
Comparative Analysis with Peer Institutions
The Rotunda Hospital, as Ireland's oldest maternity institution, handles a higher annual birth volume than its Dublin peers, the National Maternity Hospital (NMH) and Coombe Women and Infants University Hospital, delivering approximately 8,000–9,000 infants yearly compared to 6,800–9,000 at each peer.[66][67] This elevated caseload, noted as 20% greater than sister Dublin units in recent analyses, reflects its role serving Dublin's inner-city population with elevated socioeconomic deprivation and associated obstetric risks, such as higher rates of preterm labor and comorbidities. In contrast, the NMH and Coombe manage somewhat lower volumes, enabling potentially more resource-intensive per-case interventions, though all three contribute disproportionately to national totals as the largest units.[68] Key performance divergences appear in intervention rates, particularly caesarean sections (CS), where Rotunda consistently exceeds national and peer benchmarks. In 2020, Rotunda's total CS rate reached 42.7%, against a national average of 35.4%, with assisted vaginal deliveries at 18.7% versus 14.5% nationally; peer-specific rates for NMH and Coombe were not disaggregated but inferred lower given the aggregate.[69] By 2022, Rotunda's CS rate climbed to 39%, its highest recorded, amid trends of rising primary and repeat procedures across Irish units but amplified at Rotunda due to case complexity.[70] National CS stabilized around 36–37% in subsequent years, with NMH employing active third-stage management to curb rises, achieving relatively lower rates through policy emphasis on vaginal births.[71] Coombe similarly reports subgroup CS declines (e.g., Group 1 from 12.8% to 12.6% between 2023–2024), though total rates align closer to national norms.[72] These disparities likely stem from causal factors like Rotunda's demographic burden—higher nulliparity, multiples, and public patient loads—rather than systemic deficiencies, as adjusted outcomes remain within national bounds.| Metric (Year) | Rotunda Hospital | National Maternity Hospital | Coombe Hospital | National Average |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Births (2021) | 9,147 | 8,968 | 8,315 | 60,492 (total) |
| CS Rate (2020) | 42.7% | Not specified | Not specified | 35.4% |
| Assisted Vaginal (2020) | 18.7% | Not specified | Not specified | 14.5% |
| Births (2022) | 8,241 | 6,887 | Not specified | ~57,000 (est.) |