| Conjoined
Twins: Tragedy and Joy
Should doctors decide (or parents
or lawyers in courts) whether one should die so the other conjoined
twin can live? What are conjoined twins? Two heads on
one baby. Moral / ethical issues and debates.

(Pictures above are not of conjoined twins referred to in this article)
Conjoined twins (or Siamese twins) are often in the news, for example in Feburary 2004 when Rebecca Martinez was born with a second parasitic, half-formed head attached to her own. Sadly, Rebecca died shortly after an operation to cut off the extra head.
We saw another tragedy in 2000 following the arrival in the UK of distraught parents from
the Maltese Island Gozo, seeking specialist surgical help to separate
their two newborn babies, Jodie and Mary. Pediatric surgeons
at St Mary's Hospital in Manchester had no experience of separating
conjoined twins but feared that unless they acted fast, both would
die. The parents were told that despite appearances, Mary's
internal organs were so poorly formed that she could not survive
without being joined to Jodie. The parents of the conjoined
twins refused an operation, and the case was heard in court.
The Judges ordered that the operation should go ahead..... but.....
What are Conjoined Twins?
Conjoined twins are formed from a single egg which
develops into two almost separate balls of cells. In normal twinning,
each ball becomes an identical twin. As a result cells in conjoined
twins become confused about where they are in the body - indeed
which of the two conjoined twins they are actually in.
In normal embryo and foetus development every cell
knows where it is in the body because the neighbours produce chemical
messages. So a skin cell knows not only it is skin, but that
it is - say - nose skin, rather than chin or ear or lip skin. In
conjoined twins these chemical messages don't work properly - how
can they? The end results can be very bizarre:
a single organism with two heads, two hearts, four legs and arms
- or is that single organism actually two people, two individual
conjoined twins?
Two heads on one body - another
type of conjoined twins

Picture above does not relate
to this case below
I once was present in the labour room when a child
was born with two heads - yes two heads - on a single set of enlarged
shoulders. conjoined twins or just another major abnormality?
So then. you can't label all conjoined twins the same. There
are huge variations in the degree of joining. Some are born
with two bodies and one head for example.
In the case above, the two headed child / conjoined
twins was / were stillborn. But what if it / they had stayed
alive? What if we had landed up with two thoughtful conjoined
twin brains on the same body - perhaps only one actually in control
of movements below the neck?
Strangely enough, a surgeon has made an artificial
conjoined twin of a monkey, onto which a second head was transplanted.
(See video).
The moral debate on separation
of conjoined twins
In fact the situation with the conjoined twins in the
UK was in a way quite similar. Although at first sight each
appeared to have a separate well formed body with some joining at
the lower body, detailed tests showed these conjoined twins were very
unequal - one was providing the heart, lungs and many other basic
functions.
The other conjoined twin was very poorly equipped for
separate life. To make matters worse, these conjoined twins,
Jodie and Mary, were also to some extent mutually dependent.
If separated, the stronger and more capable conjoined twin (Jodie)
would need huge amounts of surgery over subsequent years, and was
likely to suffer significant handicap.
The parents came in a hurry to the UK because they
heard that Britain was expert on the management of conjoined twins,
hoping no doubt that both could be separated with few long term
problems. The long court battle was decided with doctors being given
the right to cut off the weaker conjoined twin, thereby killing Mary,
to preserve the life of Jodie - against the parent's wishes.
They felt that if the two could not be safely separated then they
should be left together and nursed with loving care until natural
events took over. Some doctors said that both would soon be
dead in that case. Others said that these two conjoined twins
could survive far longer with good basic care.
Doctors have second thoughts on
separation of conjoined twins
Of course, once the court battle was won by doctors,
they began to have second thoughts. It is a brave doctor indeed
who is willing to take the knife to two conjoined twins, both of which
are at that point alive and growing, and see perhaps both conjoined
twins die in the operating theatre or very shortly afterwards.
Easier to go ahead if the parents want their conjoined twins separated
and understand and accept the risks - but what if you have had to
force the whole thing on them in the first place?
And there is another issue. The survivor of
any such conjoined twins will need huge care efforts and community support.
In the case of Jodi and her sister, the parents said this would be unlikely in their own culture and they
felt very resentful and angry at what they saw as gross medical
interference.
A fundamental problem in conjoined twin decisions is
that the parents themselves may not always agree, they may each
feel differently on different days. It is common for parents
to feel somehow that the birth of conjoined twins is their fault,
or to blame each other, doctors, society or God. The
natural joy of birth has been replaced by overwhelming grief for
the loss of what might have been - in this case one or two perfectly
normal children. This is a hard place to make life-changing decisions
about conjoined twins management.
Doctors should treat with great
care
My own view, on balance is that doctors should tread
with great care when parents are refusing certain treatments for
their children, where the outcome of successful treatment is likely
to be severe handicap and loss of quality of life. It
is a human right for any human being to refuse medical treatment,
and it is the responsibility in the case of children for parents
to take those decisions on behalf of their children. In this
case the fight was because some doctors disagreed with the parents
and wanted to take that responsibility away.
But these parents had come to the UK in good faith,
seeking advice on the management of conjoined twins. They did
not expect to find themselves imprisoned in the country, forbidden
to take their children back home, and forced to take that advice,
when they believed it to be morally wrong. Their conjoined children
were essentially kidnapped by court, and imprisoned against their
parents' will in the UK. That does not sit comfortably with
me.
Medicine gone mad
Too many times I have seen medicine gone stark raving
lunatic mad with aggressive over-treatment and stupid decisions.
Even the Catholic church, traditionally the most conservative in
these matters, has taken the position that doctors should not strive
officiously to keep someone alive. This is a common issue
in the care of those dying of advanced cancer. It was in keeping
with this that the Vatican offered a safe refuge and hospice care.
Here is a strange irony: if mother had arrived
a day before going into labour, under existing UK law doctors could
have killed the conjoined twins in the womb and then forced a labour
and buried or cremated them without any fuss whatsoever. The
UK has one of the laxest abortion laws in the world. But the moment
these two conjoined twins were born, the world began to worry that
every possible effort should be used to at least keep one alive.
It would be far safer for the future of humanity if
we meddled less, and allowed nature far more room to take its own
course, neither slaughtering babies in the womb just hours or minutes
before birth, nor going over the top to fight for life at all possible
costs after birth.
* The Siamese name often used for conjoined twins comes from the well known
twins Eng and Chang born to Chinese parents in Siam (now Thailand).
The first surgical separation of Siamese twins was in 1953.
Pictures
of Siamese twins - not for sensitive people - distressing
Life and death
decisions - when I have been asked to kill people as a doctor
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