For nurses at a Missouri children’s hospital, babies are a true labor of love.

Thirty-six staffers at the Neonatal Intensive Care Nursery (NICU) at Children’s Mercy are due to either have babies of their own or just became new moms this year, the Kansas City hospital boasted on Facebook.

The photo, taken earlier this year, features the beaming women cradling their newborns and showing off their burgeoning bellies with signs bearing their childrens’ birthdays and due dates.

Of the 20 babies already born, all but two are boys.

“Patients joke to not drink the water in this place unless you want to get pregnant,” nurse and new mom Allison Ronco, 32, told “Good Morning America.”

Ronco, who was the first staffer to give birth in 2019 with the Jan. 7 birth of son Henry, insisted it was not unusual to see so many colleagues with baby bumps.

“We always have a baby boom going on like this. For us, it is just our normal,” she told GMA, pointing out that they are in the perfect place to receive help. “We have an amazing support system. There is no shortage of parental advice among us.”

Nurse Sarah Carboneau, 27, needed that support more than she wanted, however, having to bring baby son Ben to the NICU after he was born with a heart defect.

“I was a mess because I’ve seen a lot of things [as a nurse]. It was an out-of-body experience because I knew what to expect when he was getting transported to the NICU,” Carboneau told “GMA” of the “most traumatic event” of her life.

“I was surrounded by everyone I knew. [The] feeling all of the love was overwhelming.”

Baby Ben has since made a full recovery.

“The positive outcome of Ben made me more grateful and blessed and has reaffirmed what I do every day,” she said on the show.

Going through motherhood has brought the staff closer, too, Ronco said.

“We definitely truly are all really good friends. We are all raising these babies together,” she told GMA.