A graduating woman in a cap and gown embraces her young child.

A BRAIN-DEAD pregnant mum is being kept alive for her foetus to grow – but her grieving family have said it’s “torture” and want her to pass.

Adriana Smith, 30, was nine weeks pregnant when she went to hospital in Georgia seeking treatment for agonising headaches three months ago.

A graduating woman in a cap and gown embraces her young child.
Adriana Smith has been kept on life support due to being pregnantCredit: GoFundMe
Woman embracing her child.
Adriana already has a young sonCredit: GoFundMe
Close-up of Adriana Smith, 9 weeks pregnant, on life support.
Adriana initially went to the hospital due to agonising headachesCredit: GoFundMe

The young nurse was sent home by doctors with medication who didn’t conduct a CT scan.

Adriana awoke the following day experiencing shortness of breath and producing gargling sounds. The hospital later diagnosed her with blood clots in her brain.

After unsuccessful surgery to relieve the pressure they were causing, Adriana was tragically declared brain-dead.

The nurse has a seven-year-old son who is now without his mum, leaving Adriana’s already-grieving family devastated.

However, the distressing situation escalated into “an absolute horror show” when Emory University Hospital informed Adriana’s family that despite her legal death, she could not be allowed to pass away.

This is because the hospital – where Adriana previously worked – say it’s acting “in compliance with Georgia’s abortion laws”.

The hospital insists on keeping Adriana’s body on life support, using breathing and feeding tubes, until medical professionals decide the male fetus is developed enough for a cesarean section in early August.

Health officials in Georgia reportedly believe that removing her from life support would violate the state’s strict anti-abortion laws.

The laws prohibit termination once a foetal heartbeat is detected at roughly six weeks.

Despite Georgia’s contentious law dubbed the Living Infants Fairness and Equality (LIFE) Act containing an exception to save the life of the mother, according to the hospital, this doesn’t apply to Adriana.

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They say this is because her life is beyond saving.

Adriana’s heartbroken family hadn’t made a decision on whether to switch off her life support, but have been left devastated that the choice is no longer theirs.

Adriana’s mum April Newkirk heartbreakingly told 11Alive: “This is torture for me.

“I see my daughter breathing by the ventilator but she’s not there.”

April also revealed how the foetus – named ‘Chance’ by the family – has hydrocephalus, otherwise known as fluid on the brain.

This means that even if he survives the pregnancy, he could be born with severe disabilities.

April added: “He may be blind, may not be able to walk, may not survive once he’s born.

“Right now, the journey is for baby Chance to survive.

Photo of Adriana Smith, 9 weeks pregnant, with another woman.
Adriana Smith has been declared brain-deadCredit: GoFundMe
Emory University Hospital building exterior.
Emory University Hospital, where Adriana Smith, a woman who was about nine weeks pregnant when she was declared brain-dead, has been kept on life-support since FebruaryCredit: Reuters

“Whatever condition God allows him to come here in, we’re going to love him just the same.”

Despite Georgia’s LIFE Act just about getting passed in 2019, it didn’t come into effect until 2022 when the Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade.

This is the 1973 case that determined a woman’s constitutional right to an abortion.

Doctors have anticipated that there will be even more problems for the growing foetus, with life-support systems not designed for long-term treatment of brain-dead patients.

And with blood no longer running to Adriana’s brain, the organ is beginning to decompose.

Director of the maternal foetal medicine division at George Washington University said: “The chance of there being a healthy newborn at the end of this is very, very small.”

Legal experts have argued that the ways in which anti-abortion laws have been written have made doctors and hospitals fear potentially facing criminal charges.

They also say lawmakers should have anticipated how the movement to establish what’s been dubbed “foetal personhood” – where a foetus would have legal rights – would end up putting the rights of the mum below those of their unborn child.

Some of Georgia’s conservatives have even argued that the state’s LIFE law has been misinterpreted.

The state’s Republican attorney general Chris Carr last week said in a statement that the law doesn’t require doctors to keep brain-dead patients alive as turning off life support “is not an action with the purpose to terminate a pregnancy”.

But others like state Senator Ed Setzler has said that there’s a “valuable human life” and that “it’s the right thing to save it”.

It is not the first time an American woman has been kept on life support due to a pregnancy.

In 2014, Marlise Munoz became brain-dead due to a pulmonary embolism at 14 weeks pregnant.

Hospital workers had refused to honour Marlise’s previously stated wish to not be kept alive on machines.

The medical staff cited a state law that stopped hospitals from withdrawing or witholding “life-sustaining treatment from a pregnant patient”.

But Marlise’s husband began a legal battle to get her taken off life support, with a judge ruling in his favour.

Marlise was removed from life support before the foetus was born.

What are the abortion laws in Georgia?

By Annabel Bate, Foreign News Reporter

ABORTIONS in Georgia are banned after around six weeks of pregnancy.

They are not allowed after fetal cardiac activity, otherwise known as a heartbeat, is detected.

The Living Infants Fairness and Equality (LIFE) Act prohibits abortions after this point, apart from if there are very limited circumstances like medical emergencies of if the pregnancy is a result of rape or incest.

Doctors can face 10 years in prison for performing abortions illegally.

When in Georgia who receive an abortion after six weeks won’t face criminal charges or punishments.

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