tool name

close
tool goes here

Q&A: Nurse has celebrated New Year's Eve with new life for 20 years at birth center

Instead of anticipating the New Year’s ball drop Monday night, Patsy Pitts will ring in 2013 by being on the lookout for women in labor. She’s been a staff nurse at the birth center of Tacoma General Hospital for about 20 years, and has worked almost every New Year’s Eve during that time.

Published: Dec. 31, 2012 at 7:09 a.m. PSTUpdated: Dec. 31, 2012 at 7:37 a.m. PST
0 comments
Veteran labor and delivery nurse Patsy Pitts attends to a newborn Friday at Tacoma General Hospital. Pitts has been at Tacoma General for about 20 years. Years ago in Michigan, she delivered a baby in a van in a hospital parking lot. (DEAN J. KOEPFLER/Staff photographer)

Instead of anticipating the New Year’s ball drop Monday night, Patsy Pitts will ring in 2013 by being on the lookout for women in labor.

She’s been a staff nurse at the birth center of Tacoma General Hospital for about 20 years, and has worked almost every New Year’s Eve during that time.

That’s long enough that she’s starting to see babies she’s cared for having babies of their own.

Pitts helped with some of the first infants of the year at different hospitals where she worked since the 1970s. She will be working the holiday again this year, starting at 7 p.m., to welcome into the world some of the South Sound’s first babies of 2013.

Question: What’s the atmosphere in the birth center like on New Year’s Eve?

Answer: There’s a lot of anticipation. There’s usually competition throughout the area to get the first baby. You definitely feel that on New Year’s Eve. Some hospitals will call around to see. Usually we’re so busy we don’t have time for that.

Q: Within the hospital, do nurses compete to have the first baby of the year?

A: That nurse is usually with the patient eight to 12 hours. They get to know who you are and trust you, and you get to know them. I don’t know if I have (had the first baby of the year) at this hospital, but I know I have in other hospitals. It’s exciting. Even though it’s maybe not our patient, we’re always excited when we have the first baby of the year at Tacoma General.

Q. Share some war stories of unusual deliveries.

A. When they had the old emergency room, security was right outside the door. We got a call one night that a patient was in active labor and could we pick her up. The poor security guard was terrified. It was kind of cute. (The mom) almost delivered in the elevator, in fact.

Another one, I couldn’t even get her out of the elevator. I had to deliver her baby. We prefer a physician there, but sometimes you can’t get them there fast enough. Back in the ’70s (in Michigan), I went out and delivered a woman in the back of a Chevy van, in the back of the parking lot.

Q. Have you seen parents go to any lengths to try to have the first baby of the year?

A. I’ve never really run into that. You’ll have women who try to walk around and have more active labor and things like that. Some people want the first baby of the year, and some people would prefer to have — how can I put it? I don’t want to say tax write-off. I think most people just want a healthy baby.

Q. Do you do anything to celebrate New Year’s with the other nurses?

A. Sometimes we have nonalcoholic cider and we toast the New Year, but we’re usually pretty busy at that time.

Q. Is New Year’s Eve a busier night than others in the birth center?

A. Holidays are family times, and we sometimes get more (extended) families. With the anticipation, maybe it does seem like it’s busy. Christmas night was kind of slow this year. I won’t know until I go in that night.

Q. Why do you choose to work the holiday each year?

A. To me it’s one of the happiest units you can work in. Most labor and delivery nurses love it and they stay there forever. The parents will remember me, and they bring the kids in, and that’s a lot of fun. To me it’s kind of a party, and it’s fun to get the first baby and all that.

What better way to celebrate the new year than to have a baby?

alexis.krell@thenewstribune.com
blog.thenewstribune.com/crime

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

MORE PHOTOS
CONTESTS

Similar stories