Fewer Twins, and the Risk They Carried

Cedar Valley News
June 20, 2026
Fewer Twins, and the Risk They Carried
By Aisha Khalid

She was eight weeks along, and she had waited a long time. We watched the screen together, the two of us, while the small flicker found its rhythm. One heartbeat, quick and certain, filling the dark little room with its sound.

She smiled. Then she said, almost to herself, “I’d half hoped for two.”

I have heard the wish before. She had come to it the hard way, through years and needles and more disappointment than she would tell most people. When the clinic called with good news, part of her had pictured a matched set. Two cribs. The whole thing done at once. A fullness to make up for the long wait. There is a particular hope in a person who has waited too long for one of something. It does not ask for moderation.

“I asked them for two,” she said. “They would only put one back.”

I did not rush to answer. The wish is a real one, and it deserves a moment before the medicine arrives to explain itself.

A report crossed my desk last week, the kind most people never see. In 2014, thirty-four of every thousand babies born in this country were twins. Last year, thirty. The twin birth rate had climbed for more than three decades, and then, quietly, it turned and began to fall. Headlines, if they bother, will call it a decline.

I am old enough in this work to remember what the climb looked like from inside an exam room. I remember the twin pregnancies of fifteen years ago. The early bed rest. The blood pressures I did not like. The deliveries which came weeks too soon. I remember a mother in a hospital gown moving between two incubators down the hall, allowed to lay one hand on each, not yet allowed to hold either. Twins are a joy. They are also, in plain medical terms, a harder and riskier road for everyone on it.

What changed is not the babies. What changed is us. For years, the clinics placed two or three embryos, hoping one would take, and accepting the gamble when more than one did. Then the science of selecting a single strong embryo improved, and the gamble stopped being worth taking. Doctors began putting back one. The number on my desk is the result. Fewer twins is not a sadness in the data. It is a danger fewer families now have to walk through.

I told her some of this. Not as a lecture. As an answer to the question under her question, which was whether she had been given less than she asked for.

She had not. She had been given the safer road by people who had learned, across many years and not a few hard outcomes, which one it was. The one embryo was not a smaller hope. It was the wiser one.

This is the part of medicine almost no one claps for. A cancer caught early gets a story. A life saved on a table gets a story. But the danger which never arrives makes no sound at all. The preterm birth which did not happen, the tiny baby who did not spend a month under lights, the mother who held her child on the first day instead of the fortieth, leave no trace in anyone’s memory. They are the best work we do, and they are invisible, because their whole nature is to be the thing which did not occur. We have no ceremony for it. No one writes a card to thank a doctor for the emergency they never had. The mother does not lie awake grateful for the month in intensive care she was spared, because she never knew the month had been waiting for her.

A number going down is not always a loss. Sometimes it is a multitude of quiet dangers, each one not run. Safety, written as subtraction.

We looked at the screen again before she left. One heartbeat, still going, strong and unhurried. I have delivered enough babies and sat with enough grief to have stopped ranking miracles by size.

I told her it was the safest sound I know.

Cedar Valley News has a Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. Tell us about a quiet good outcome in your own family — the trouble which, looking back, never came. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, the decline in the United States twin birth rate described here — from about thirty-four twins per thousand births in 2014 to thirty in 2024 — is real, reported by the National Center for Health Statistics.

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