Adopting a child from foster care is a great way to help a child while growing your family. Children enter foster care through no fault of their own, because they have been abused, neglected, or abandoned. Just more than half of children who go into foster care return to their birth families. For children who become available for adoption, many are adopted by a relative or their foster parents.
According to foster mom Nancy, doctors successfully separated a baby girl, born with four legs and two spines in a rare and complex surgery. Paediatric and reconstructive surgeon Dr. Vicari said the ten-month-old Dominique underwent a six-hour procedure involving five surgeons at the Advocate Children’s Hospital. “She is now thriving with the foster family who will look after her until she is well enough to return home. “It’s going rather well. She was only in the hospital a total of five days. She’s been home with ‘step-mom’ and just doing very, very well,” her foster mother said.
Dominique was born with a parasitic twin. The bottom half of her not-fully-developed twin’s body protruded from her neck and back. Dr. Ruge, a paediatric neurosurgeon at the hospital said, “A parasitic twin is an identical twin that fails to fully separate in development. “In other words, not another independent twin, but a twin that was dependent on her body system, such that Dominique’s heart and lungs provided the nourishment.”
Doctors did not give Dominique’s family name. Nancy has looked after Dominique since she arrived in the United States for the surgery. “She’s been a joy. We really enjoyed having her in our family. “We send a lot of photos and updates and so we know that Dominique’s family sees what she’s doing and seeing that she has two new teeth and she’s learning to wave and doing all sorts of special things.” Swabb said she did not want to think about saying goodbye to Dominique when she returns to her family in the Ivory Coast.