Mother’s joy 
as surgeons separate twin girls

A mother has described her joy after a successful operation to separate her conjoined twins.

Rosie and Ruby Formosa, who were born joined at the abdomen and shared part of their intestine, needed an emergency operation to separate them.

The identical twins, who are only 12 weeks old, underwent an operation at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) on July 27 – the day after they were born.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Despite being told that survival chances were low, the sisters are now doing well and are smiling “bubbly babies”, their mother Angela said.

Mrs Formosa, 32, from Bexleyheath, Kent, said she had a “textbook” pregnancy with her first daughter Lily, now aged five, so finding out the twins were joined was a “shock”.

“We didn’t know what to expect until they were born – the doctors could not tell where they were connected,” she said.

The day after they were born the girls were operated on by a team of specialists led by paediatric surgeon Professor Agostino Pierro.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“The operation to separate the twins had to be performed as an emergency because of an intestinal blockage,” he said.

“We are delighted with the outcome of the operation. The babies will need further treatment in the future, but we expect that they will both be able to lead happy and normal lives.”

Mrs Formosa said that she and her taxi driver husband Daniel, 36, were “happy and relieved” to have the girls at home.

She said: “They are really well, they are putting on weight.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“They are normal bubbly babies who are starting to smile and cry when they want something.”

The mother-of-three added that she was “incredibly grateful” to the GOSH staff.

“What they have done for my two girls is amazing,” she said.

“When I was pregnant they were saying that the survival chances were quite low. For them to have been operated on and doing so well – it is amazing.”