Photos: Team of 50 Kenyan doctors successfully separate conjoined twins
 Doctors
 at the Kenyatta Hospital on Wednesday morning November 3rd, successfully separated 
conjoined twins in the first ever surgery of its kind on the continent.
A team of 50 medical specialists separated the twin girls, Favour and
 Blessing, whose lower backs were fused, in an operation that took 23 
hours and concluded at 5am on Wednesday morning after a two year 
hospital stay.
“It is the first time in Sub-Saharan Africa, outside South Africa where this kind of operation has been done successfully. So this fete is a statement to the world ‘in KNH and in Kenya, we can do what other people can do."
The
 girls have been admitted to the hospital for the last two years since 
their birth in late 2014. The doctors however opted to given the 
children time to grow before 
putting them under the knife to allow them time for preparation and to 
allow the girls to grow in strength as explained by doctor Mutie. 
"These particular ones were joined in the sacro area, in the bottom area, and they had to be given food to grow, to have enough muscles for that separation to occur. So this day marks the culmination of those two years of preparation and I’m humbled by the importance and enormity of this event."
Below is a report posted by the Hospital on its official Facebook page:  
"On 1st November 2016, the Kenyatta National Hospital and School of Health Sciences - University of Nairobi medical team successfully separated the conjoined twins Blessing and Favour. The separation surgery of the Sacrophagus twins who were joined at the lower back took 23 hours. The twins have been in KNH since 5th September 2014 following their referral from St. Theresa Hospital, Kiirua in Meru County.
The multidisciplinary
 team of over fifty (50) medical specialists including paediatric 
surgeons, neurosurgeons, plastic and reconstructive surgeons, 
anesthetists and nursing teams performed the 23 hour long highly 
delicate surgery on 1st November 2016 at the KNH Main Theatres leading 
to the successful separation of the twins. The surgery ended 2nd 
November, 2016 at 5:00am.
The children have been admitted in the Specialized Surgical Paediatric 
Ward for over two years to allow development of key organs and also 
enable them gain appropriate muscles to withstand the surgery. The 
conjoined twin girls who were born on 4th September 2014 were joined at 
the sacral region of the lower spinal cord. 
Surgery of this 
nature usually required planning and regular consultation by a 
multi-disciplinary team of KNH and School of Health Sciences, UON 
specialists to exchange ideas on how best to perform the procedure while
 minimizing risk of either paralysis or neural damage. 
Having 
been convinced that time was appropriate, the team set on the surgery on
 1st November 2016, at 6.00am and after 23 long hours in theatre, they 
emerged with the two separate children who are currently admitted in the
 ICU. The children are stable, receiving specialized care and we are 
monitoring progress. We are confident that they will fully recovery and 
live normal independent lives to adulthood.
We thank God for this
 great milestone and celebrate the team for the job well done. It has 
taken not only skills but patience, commitment and self confidence to 
bring this joy to the mother, relatives, friends and honor to our 
country for the first ever sarcophagus surgery in Sub-Saharan Africa. 
The Successful surgery is a testimony that the country is endowed with 
medical specialists who can handle complicated human health challenges"
 See photos of the twins at birth, in 2014 and also photos of the doctors after the surgery, below...












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