These conjoined sisters were born fused at the chest and stomach Because of this connection, they struggled to sit, turn over, or even lie comfortably
When the girls were just over one year old, a team of 75 doctors decided to perform an extremely complex surgery. Everything went perfectly, and the doctors succeeded in separating the sisters.
Curious to see what the sisters look like after the separation? Their before/after photos were shown in the first comment
When Anna and Hope Richards were born, everything was different from the very first seconds of their lives.
The girls were joined at the chest and abdomen: their tiny bodies were fused at one point, from the sternum down to the belly button. They shared a diaphragm and one large liver.
Even their hearts were connected by a major blood vessel, which made it difficult for doctors to say for a long time whether a safe separation would be possible.
Their parents, Jill and Michael, looked at their daughters every day, hoping that one day the girls would be able to live separately.
Anna and Hope spent the first months of their lives in the hospital. They lay side by side, always touching each other with their shoulders and cheeks.
Nurses said that if one woke up, the other woke up too — as if they shared the same rhythm. But because their chest and abdomen were joined, it was hard for them to sit up, turn, or even find a comfortable position.
Their parents couldn’t hold each girl separately — they had to lift them together, carefully supporting their shared chest.
When the girls were a little over one year old, the team of 75 doctors decided to operate. Preparation took months: 3D models, dozens of scans, consultations with specialists.
On January 13, 2018, the incredibly difficult seven-hour surgery began. Surgeons separated the liver, reconstructed the diaphragms, divided the shared vessel, and created two separate rib cages and abdominal walls.
When they were placed on two different operating tables, an almost sacred silence filled the room — Anna and Hope were finally two.
Today, the girls are growing up like normal children. Anna went home first, Hope a bit later, but both quickly caught up with each other in development.
They play, laugh, argue, and hug — but now as two independent girls, no longer a single inseparable whole.
Their mother says that every new day is a small miracle that began the moment the doctors first separated their tiny hands and gave them the chance to live their own lives.


