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Smith's family said doctors at Emory Midtown declared her brain dead in February, but are keeping her on life support under Georgia's "heartbeat law." ...
In collaboration with Adriana Smith’s family, Georgia Reproductive Justice organizations, and allies are gathering on Sunday, ...
As Adriana Smith stays on life support at Emory University, here's an update on her baby, the controversy, and the GoFundMe ...
A pregnant woman being kept alive after brain death because of Georgia’s strict abortion law raises legal and ethical questions about medical consent, experts said.
In February, Adriana Smith, a 30-year-old Georgia nurse and mother, was nine weeks pregnant when she was taken to Emory University Hospital with severe head pains. A CT scan showed blood clots in her ...
It’s true that Georgia lawmakers probably weren’t thinking of women like Adriana Smith when they passed their abortion ban. Smith, a nurse and mother, was pregnant with her second child when ...
A Georgia hospital continues to be the center ... doctors, and law experts. Adriana Smith, 30, was nearly nine weeks pregnant in February when she started experiencing intense headaches.
Georgia woman who was nine weeks pregnant when declared brain dead and now is forced to carry her baby to viability is the ...
Nearly half of Georgia’s counties are reproductive care deserts, all while looming Medicaid cuts threaten to worsen access to care. Adriana Smith was a mother, daughter, and nurse who deserved a ...