A
teenage mother gives birth to baby while the rest of the body
trapped inside was
decapitated while giving birth. 19, Kagiso Kgatla, was just six months pregnant
when she suffered the traumatic delivery and lost her child in Tambo Memorial
Hospital, in Boksburg, South Africa. She reportedly had to wait another 24
hours before the rest of her baby’s body could be removed from her womb.
She
told ENCA: “A doctor came and said I should push. I pushed and pushed. nothing.
‘He inserted his hands and said I should try again but still there was nothing.
‘He also said he could see the baby’s head. Then he asked for those big spoons.
‘That’s when my baby’s head came out, but only the head. ‘The body remained
inside.’ The foetus had a heartbeat before the delivery, eNCA reported. She
told the news channel through tears: ‘I am not okay. I am not coping at all. ‘I
think they must be jailed, they should… for what they put me through”. Kagiso
is now planning to sue the doctors involved and is demanding answers over the
botched birth as she struggles to come to terms with her ordeal.
Kagiso
said doctors had told her that the baby was likely to suffer from some
abnormalities but she was still willing to care for the child and went ahead
with the pregnancy. Reportedly medics warned her that her unborn child only had
a ‘very small chance’ of living. But she told eNCA that she didn’t understand
that the child was likely to die within hours of giving birth. Head of
obstetrics at the hospital, Dr Gilbert Anyetei, said: ‘Normally, when the head
is not crowning we assist. We call it assisted delivery. ‘In this particular
instance the head popped out on its own and we tried to see if the rest of the
body would follow, but the rest of the body didn’t follow.’
The
Gauteng health department has launched an investigation into the circumstances
around the delivery. In March 2014, a similar incident occurred when a Scottish
woman delivered a baby whose head was left inside her during labour at
Ninewells Hospital in Dundee, Scotland. The Medical Practitioners Tribunal
Service ruled that consultant gynaecologist Dr Vaishnavy Laxman made an error
in not attempting the delivery by C-section. Two other doctors carried a
C-section on the woman, following the incident, to remove the infant’s head. It
was ‘re-attached’ to his body so his mother could hold him before she said
goodbye.
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