Nima, Dawa
Nima and Dawa after being released from Melbourne hospital. Image - Facebook

Nima and Dawa, the two 15-month-old Bhutanese girls, who earlier remained conjoined from the lower chest to just above the pelvis and shared a liver, left Melbourneโ€™s Royal Childrenโ€™s Hospital after they were successfully separated.

In a report published on Monday by South China Morning Post stated that Nima and Dawa were separated during an operation at Melbourneโ€™s Royal Childrenโ€™s Hospital on November 9 that lasted for almost six hours.

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There had been a major challenge to reconstruct the abdomens of the twins.

The report quoted the grateful mother of the twins, Bhumchu Zangmo, as saying: โ€œThank you, everyone,โ€ as she wheeled her daughters from the hospital where their lives have been transformed since their arrival on October 2.

The report also quoted the hospitalโ€™s head of paediatric surgery, Dr Joe Crameri, as telling media persons that the twins had made an โ€œexcellent recoveryโ€ and were acting independently.

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Crameri said: โ€œI think to the staff on the wards โ€ฆ theyโ€™ve seen a remarkable two girls, girls that weโ€™ve watched over this journey who started off really attached and bonded to one another, but ultimately frustrated with one another.โ€

The appreciation letter from Fourth King of Bhutan, Jigme Singye Wangchuk, to the CEO, Royal Childrenโ€™s Hospital, Melbourne.
The appreciation letter from Fourth King of Bhutan, Jigme Singye Wangchuk, to the CEO, Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne.

The twins from Bhutan had become โ€œincredibly anxiousโ€ after the separation when they became aware that they were no longer in front of each other, said Dr Crameri.

โ€œOver the last couple of weeks, weโ€™ve seen them gain confidence, weโ€™ve seen them gain independence, weโ€™ve seen them gain a lot of strengths,โ€ Crameri further said.

It has been reported that before they return to Bhutan, the girls will continue their recovery at a retreat in the town of Kilmore outside Melbourne run by the charity that brought them to Australia, the Children First Foundation.

After their separation in the hospital, the Fourth King of Bhutan, Jigme Singye Wangchuk, wrote an appreciation letter to Hospital CEO John Stanway where he expressed his โ€œdeep gratitude and appreciation to the Royal Childrenโ€™s Hospital in Melbourne and to Dr Joe Crameri and his team for the successful surgery in separating the conjoined twins. The successful surgery has made it possible for Nima and Dawa to enjoy a happy and meaningful life in Bhutanโ€.