Scottish Daily Mail

Quads who are real ward sisters!

They follow their nurse mother by working for NHS

- By Andrew Levy

WHEN she gave birth to quads 21 years ago, Joby Shibu Mathew was naturally proud of her little angels.

Now her four daughters have given the nurse even more joy, by following in her footsteps and working for the NHS.

Aneetta, Anjel and Aleena truly are sisters – they joined the wards at the Royal Papworth Hospital in Cambridge this week after qualifying as nurses.

Aneesha took a physiother­apy course and began work at Kettering Hospital in Northampto­nshire two weeks ago.

Mrs Shibu Mathew, who works in the oncology department of Ipswich Hospital, hopes her daughters will inspire others to consider a career in the NHS.

‘They said to me they saw my passion for caring and being a nurse and that they wanted to do it too,’ said the 52-year-old from Woodbridge, Suffolk. ‘It’s just how it worked out that they all wanted to do the same thing.

‘They have always been very close and love each other very much. It was so emotional to say goodbye when they moved out.

‘This is an amazing opportunit­y for all of them and I know they will love it.

‘My husband Shibu and I are very proud of all of them.’ Mrs Shibu Mathew was working as a nurse in Oman when she fell pregnant naturally with the nonidentic­al quadruplet­s.

She and her husband moved to the UK in 2007, leaving the girls with relatives in India for two years. She was unable to use her overseas health qualificat­ion so worked in nursing home and studied at the University of Suffolk.

Mrs Shibu Mathew qualified in 2017, the year before her daughters began their studies – Aneesha at the University of East Anglia in Norwich and her sisters at the University of Suffolk.

All four completed training placements at Ipswich Hospital.

Aneesha said of her mother: ‘When she completed her degree it was a huge inspiratio­n for us all. We saw how hard she worked and why she loved it.

‘It’s challengin­g and you work long hours but that feeling that your skills are making a difference to people is really rewarding. ‘It is funny my sisters and I have gone into the same career but I think we often try to be different and we seem to end up choosing the same thing.’ It was a ‘bit strange’ branching out from her siblings as they had never been apart.

Aneetta said: ‘I want to do something in my career which is challengin­g, interestin­g and, most of all, making a difference to people’s lives on a daily basis.’

Mr Mathew, 53, a maintenanc­e engineer, said: ‘They must be the only quadruplet­s who are all working for the NHS. As a family, we are all very proud of the NHS.’

 ??  ?? Fantastic four, from left: Aneetta, Anjel and Aleena, who are now nurses at Royal Papworth Hospital, with physiother­apist Aneesha
Fantastic four, from left: Aneetta, Anjel and Aleena, who are now nurses at Royal Papworth Hospital, with physiother­apist Aneesha
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 ??  ?? All dressed up: The sisters at home in Suffolk. Left: With mother Joby before they moved to the UK
All dressed up: The sisters at home in Suffolk. Left: With mother Joby before they moved to the UK
 ??  ?? New arrivals: The quadruplet­s’ mother had been working as a nurse in Oman
New arrivals: The quadruplet­s’ mother had been working as a nurse in Oman
 ??  ?? Such proud parents: Shibu and Joby with their daughters
Such proud parents: Shibu and Joby with their daughters

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