IMPROVEMENT Parents Refused To Give Up On Their Conjoined Twins — What Happened Next Left Doctors In Tears

When Heather and Riley Delaney found out they were expecting twins, they reacted the way many hopeful parents do—laughing, crying, and imagining the future in bursts of color and joy. They pictured two cribs side by side, matching outfits, the kind of chaotic, beautiful life that only twins can bring.

But ten weeks into the pregnancy, during a routine ultrasound, the room fell quiet. The kind of quiet that sticks to your bones.

The doctor paused before speaking. She pointed gently to the monitor. The twins were not developing separately.

The girls were craniopagus twins—conjoined at the top of the head, sharing bone and blood vessels, and in rare cases, brain tissue. This condition is so uncommon that it occurs in about 1 in every 2.5 million live births, and only about 2% of conjoined twins are connected this way.

Heather and Riley listened, holding each other’s hands so tightly their knuckles turned white. They were told the pregnancy would be risky. They were told the birth would be complicated. They were told that even if the babies survived, separation might not be possible.

But the Delaneys didn’t walk away.

We knew they were ours,” Heather later said. “And we were going to fight for them, no matter how hard it got.”

The Arrival of Two Miracles

On July 24, 2016, Erin and Abby were born by C-section in North Carolina. They weighed just four pounds each.

Imagine holding not just one fragile newborn, but two—connected at the skull, tiny heads resting together like a single shared star.

Nurses moved gently. Doctors spoke softly. Their parents whispered to them like prayers.

Heather and Riley could not hold their daughters the way most new parents do. No chest-to-chest newborn moment. No rocking one to sleep while the other cried.

Every touch required planning. Every cuddle required assistance.

But love has never needed perfect circumstances.

Heather would place her hands on both girls at once, fingertips resting lightly on the warm curve of their shared connection.

A Hospital That Makes the Impossible Possible

The Delaneys searched for the one place known to have separated more conjoined twins than any hospital in the United States:

The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP).

For decades, CHOP’s neurosurgeons and plastic surgeons have pioneered surgical techniques that allow babies like Erin and Abby not only to survive—but to live full lives.

The Delaneys relocated to Philadelphia, leaving behind their home, their routines, and every certainty except the love that had led them here.

The twins spent nearly a year in CHOP’s care before doctors attempted separation.

Their team included:

  • Neurosurgeons
  • Plastic and reconstructive surgeons
  • Pediatric anesthesiologists
  • Intensive care specialists
  • Nurses who learned every curve of their breathing patterns

This wasn’t just medicine.

This was devotion.

 

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