logo
Expert says Adriana Smith's case goes beyond abortion politics

Expert says Adriana Smith's case goes beyond abortion politics

Independent01-07-2025
Adriana Smith, a 30-year-old woman from Georgia who had been declared brain-dead in February 2025, spent 16 weeks on life support while doctors worked to keep her body functioning well enough to support her developing fetus. On June 13, 2025, her premature baby, named Chance, was born via cesarean section at 25 weeks.
Smith was nine weeks pregnant when she suffered multiple blood clots in her brain. Her story gained public attention when her mother criticized doctors' decision to keep her on a ventilator without the family's consent. Smith's mother has said that doctors told the family the decision was made to align with Georgia 's LIFE Act, which bans abortion after six weeks of pregnancy and bolsters the legal standing of fetal personhood. A statement released by the hospital also cites Georgia's abortion law.
'I'm not saying we would have chosen to terminate her pregnancy,' Smith's mother told a local television station. 'But I'm saying we should have had a choice.'
The LIFE Act is one of several state laws that have been passed across the U.S. since the 2022 Dobbs v. Jackson decision invalidated constitutional protections for abortion. Although Georgia's attorney general denied that the LIFE Act applied to Smith, there's little doubt that it invites ethical and legal uncertainty when a woman dies while pregnant.
Smith's case has swiftly become the focus of a reproductive rights political firestorm characterized by two opposing viewpoints. For some, it reflects demeaning governmental overreach that quashes women's bodily autonomy. For others, it illustrates the righteous sacrifice of motherhood.
In my work as a gender and technology studies scholar, I have cataloged and studied postmortem pregnancies like Smith's since 2016. In my view, Smith's story doesn't fit straightforwardly into abortion politics. Instead, it points to the need for a more nuanced ethical approach that does not frame a mother and child as adversaries in a medical, legal or political context.
Birth after death
For centuries, Catholic dogma and Western legal precedent have mandated immediate cesarean section when a pregnant woman died after quickening, the point when fetal movement becomes discernible. But technological advances now make it possible sometimes for a fetus to continue gestating in place when the mother is brain-dead, or 'dead by neurological criteria'– a widely accepted definition of death that first emerged in the 1950s.
The first brain death during pregnancy in which the fetus was delivered after time on life support, more accurately called organ support, occurred in 1981. The process is extraordinarily intensive and invasive because the loss of brain function impedes many physiological processes. Health teams, sometimes numbering in the hundreds, must stabilize the bodies of 'functionally decapitated' pregnant women to buy more time for fetal development. This requires vital organ support, ventilation, nutritional supplements, antibiotics and constant monitoring. Outcomes are highly uncertain.
Smith's 112-day stint on organ support ranks third in length for a postmortem pregnancy, with the longest being 123 days. Hers is also the earliest ever gestational age from which the procedure has been attempted. Because time on organ support can vary widely, and because there is no established minimum fetal age considered too early to intervene, a fetus could theoretically be deemed viable at any point in pregnancy.
Postmortem pregnancy as gender-based violence
Over the past 50 years, critics of postmortem pregnancy have argued that it constitutes gender-based violence and violates bodily integrity in ways that organ donation does not. Some have compared it with Nazi pronatalist policies. Others have attributed the practice to systemic sexism and racism in medicine. Postmortem pregnancy can also compound intimate partner violence by giving brain-dead women's murderers decision-making authority when they are the fetus's next of kin.
Fetal personhood laws complicate end-of-life decision-making in ways that many consider violent, too. As I have seen in my own research, when the fetus is considered a legal person, women's wishes may be assumed, debated in court or committee, or set aside entirely, nearly always in favor of the fetus.
From the perspective of reproductive rights advocates, postmortem pregnancy is the bottom of a slippery slope down which anti-abortion sentiment has led America. It obliterates women's autonomy, pitting living and dead women against doctors, legislators and sometimes their own families, and weaponizing their own fetuses against them.
A medical perspective on rights
Viewed through a medical lens, however, postmortem pregnancy is not violent or violating, but an act of repair. Although care teams have responsibilities to both mother and fetus, a pregnant woman's brain death means she cannot be physically harmed and her rights cannot be violated to the same degree as a fetus with the potential for life.
Medical practitioners are conditioned to prioritize life over death, motivating a commitment to salvage something from a tragedy and try to partially restore a family. The high-stakes world of emergency medicine makes protecting life reflexive and medical interventions automatic. Once fetal life is detected, as one hospital spokesperson put it in a 1976 news article in The Boston Globe, 'What else could you do?'
This response does not necessarily stem from conscious sexism or anti-abortion sentiment, but from reverence for vulnerable patients. If physicians declare a pregnant woman brain-dead, patienthood often automatically transfers to the fetus needing rescue. No matter its age and despite its survival being dependent on machines, just like its mother, the fetus is entirely animate. Who or what counts as a legal person with privileges and protections might be a political or philosophical determination, but life is a matter of biological fact and within the doctors' purview.
An ethics of anti-opposition
Both of the above perspectives have validity, but neither accounts for postmortem pregnancy's ethical and biological complexity.
First, setting mother against fetus, with the rights of one endangering the rights of the other, does not match pregnancy's lived reality of 'two bodies, sutured,' as the cultural scholar Lauren Berlant put it.
Even the Supreme Court recognized this entangled duality in their 1973 ruling on Roe v. Wade, which established both constitutional protections for abortion and a governmental obligation to protect fetal life. Whether a fetus is considered a legal person or not, they wrote, pregnant women and fetuses 'cannot be isolated in their privacy' – meaning that reproductive rights issues must strike a balance, however tenuous, between maternal and fetal interests. To declare postmortem pregnancy unequivocally violent or a loss of the 'right to choose' fails to recognize the complexity of choice in a highly politicized medical landscape.
Second, maternal-fetal competition muddles the right course of action. In the U.S., competent patients are not compelled to engage in medical care they would rather avoid, even if it kills them, or to stay on life support to preserve organs for donation. But when a fetus is treated as an independent patient, exceptions could be made to those medical standards if the fetus's interests override the mother's.
For example, pregnancy disrupts standard determination of death. To protect the fetus, care teams increasingly skip a necessary diagnostic for brain death called apnea testing, which involves momentarily removing the ventilator to test the respiratory centers of the brain stem. In these cases, maternal brain death cannot be confirmed until after delivery. Multiple instances of vaginal deliveries after brain death also remain unexplained, given that the brain coordinates mechanisms of vaginal labor. All in all, it's not always clear women in these cases are entirely dead.
Ultimately, women like Adriana Smith and their fetuses are inseparable and persist in a technologically defined state of in-betweenness. I'd argue that postmortem pregnancies, therefore, need new bioethical standards that center women's beliefs about their bodies and a dignified death. This might involve recognizing pregnancy's unique ambiguities in advance directives, questioning default treatment pathways that may require harm to be done to one in order to save another, or considering multiple definitions of clinical and legal death.
In my view, it is possible to adapt our ethical standards in a way that honors all beings in these exceptional circumstances, without privileging either 'choice' or 'life,' mother or fetus.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boar's Head plant to reopen after deadly Listeria outbreak
Boar's Head plant to reopen after deadly Listeria outbreak

Daily Mail​

time5 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Boar's Head plant to reopen after deadly Listeria outbreak

Boar's Head is preparing to reopen a plant in Virginia a year after it was at the center of a deadly listeria outbreak. The Jarratt facility is set to resume operations later this year after it was shuttered last September , which the company described as a 'dark moment' in its history. Mold, mildew and insects were found by inspectors at the facility. Boar's Head deli meat triggered the biggest listeria outbreak in the US in over a decade last July — which left 10 people dead and over 60 hospitalized across 19 states. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) declared the outbreak was over a couple of months after operations ceased at the plant. Boar's Head has been working with the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) to reopen the facility — including the enforcement of new practices and protocols to ensure consumer safety. Issues for Boar's Head began in July last year when it recalled over 200,000 pounds of meat linked to the outbreak. At the time, the meat was linked to 34 illnesses and two deaths. The investigation found traces of bacteria on liverwurst samples, which were also processed alongside other meats. The company recalled the remaining 7 million pounds days later — which included ham, beef salami and turkey sold in stores and bulk . The third death was reported a week after the second recall. By the end of August, five other victims from Florida, Tennessee, New Mexico and South Carolina had died following the contamination. The final two followed soon afterward. Among those to die was father-of-three and Holocaust survivor Gunter Morgenstein, who had regularly consumed the company's liverwurst because it reminded him of his native Germany. The USDA's reports indicated the company had 69 violations at the Jarratt plant last year alone. Inspectors noted they spotted flies going in and out of vats of pickles and ants were crawling all over the walls. Other issues included built up mold and mildew on surfaces, a 'rancid smell' in some areas and 'amble blood' covering sections of the floor. At the time of the closure, Boar's Head made sure the plant underwent deep-cleaning and sent all staff to be retrained. The USDA returned to the property and lifted the factory's forced suspension on July 18 after the organization found it to be in full compliance of safety guidelines and protocols. Listeria is a rare foodborne illness that can be deadly depending on the person and part of their body that is infected. It can especially be harmful for newborns, adults aged 65 and older, pregnant women and anyone with weakened immune systems. Infected individuals may experience diarrhea, upset stomach and vomiting, and symptoms can often start with 24 hours after eating tainted food.

The best probiotics for women, recommended by health experts
The best probiotics for women, recommended by health experts

The Independent

time34 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The best probiotics for women, recommended by health experts

Your questions on the best probiotics for women, answered What is the best probiotic for women? There are lots of targeted probiotic supplements for women that work to prevent and treat intimate health concerns. For a hard-working daily supplement, Smart Strains probiotic comes highly recommended. Backed by a great deal of research, it contains lactoferrin for full vaginal support. For combating the effects of dryness, along with microbiome imbalances, Canesten's canesbiotics has a solution with added B2. If cystitis and UTIs are an issue, the added D-Mannose in the VJJ supplements might help. For an affordable option, Optibac offers a good preventative option, and Bio-Kult's candea gut supplement is recommended for pregnancy. When should I take a probiotic? Dr Rossi says: 'If you are over 12 years old, take a probiotic at the first sign of any changes in your vaginal microbiome. If you're on an antibiotic or antifungal treatment, take daily alongside this treatment for the duration of the course and continue for at least 3 months after treatment has ended.' Are vaginal probiotics safe to take? Yes, they are safe, but not everyone gets on well with them. You might want to try changing your diet first and adjusting habits and lifestyle to see if it's possible to balance your microbiome and reduce symptoms that way. What's not advised is seeking out or trying online remedies or relying on TikTok for vaginal health tips – unless they're coming from a qualified medical professional's account. Online 'remedies' for vaginal health range from the questionable to the actively harmful: apple cider vinegar baths, inserting raw garlic cloves or a cucumber, vaginal steaming, self-administered boric acid, or applying natural yoghurt directly to the vulva. 'Trends like apple cider vinegar baths can irritate the delicate vaginal tissues and disrupt the pH, leading to more harm than good,' says Dr Raizada. Garlic can cause chemical burns when used raw, while steaming carries risks of burns and infection. There's no evidence to suggest that cucumbers do anything beneficial, and foreign objects can increase infection risk. 'Some find applying natural yoghurt to the vulva soothing, but while yoghurt contains probiotics, it doesn't necessarily introduce the right strains,' she adds. Boric acid can be effective in certain cases, but only under medical supervision – misuse can be dangerous. What are the best natural remedies? The most effective preventive steps are surprisingly simple. Wash with water only, avoiding fragranced products. Choose cotton underwear and change out of damp clothes quickly. Manage stress to keep your immune system resilient. Eat a diet rich in prebiotic fibre and fermented probiotic foods. Above all, seek help early. Recurrent UTIs, thrush, bacterial vaginosis or painful sex are not conditions to silently endure. 'If you notice unusual symptoms such as unusual discharge or itching, see your GP for a proper check,' says Dr Raizada.

Texas threatens to sue organizations and doctor for increasing abortion pill access
Texas threatens to sue organizations and doctor for increasing abortion pill access

The Guardian

time35 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Texas threatens to sue organizations and doctor for increasing abortion pill access

The heated US war over abortion pills warmed up another degree on Wednesday, as the Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, sent cease-and-desist letters to two organizations and an individual that he accused of mailing abortion pills to Texans or facilitating their shipment. Paxton threatened to sue if they do not stop their alleged activities. 'These abortion drug organizations and radical activists are not above the law, and I have ordered the immediate end of this unlawful conduct,' Paxton said in a news release announcing the letters. The state of Texas bans virtually all abortions. Paxton sent the letters to Plan C, a website that provides information about how to obtain abortion pills; Her Safe Harbor, an organization that provides abortions through telemedicine; and Remy Coeytaux, a doctor who has been accused of mailing abortion pills to a Texan. Debra Lynch, a nurse practitioner who works with Her Safe Harbor, said that Paxton's letter would not stop the organization from sending abortion pills to people. If anything, Lynch suggested, it would spur the group on. 'None of our providers are primarily concerned with our own wellbeing or our own legal status,' Paxton said. 'All the horrors that women are facing because of these ridiculous bans and restrictions outweigh anything that could possibly happen to us as providers, in terms of a fine or a lawsuit or even jail time, if it were to come to that.' Lynch said that in the hours after news of Paxton's letter broke, Her Safe Harbor received more than 150 requests from Texans who were afraid about abortion access and want to obtain pills that they may use in the future, Lynch said. Normally, Her Safe Harbor has around four to five providers taking calls from patients. Now, they plan to have at least 10 working 'until this wave of fear subsides'. Neither Plan C nor Coeytaux immediately replied to the Guardian's request for comment. In the three years since the US supreme court overturned Roe v Wade and unleashed a wave of state-level abortion bans, abortions have surged in the United States. This rise is due in large part to the availability of abortion pills and the emergence of 'shield laws', which have been enacted by a handful of blue states and aim to protect abortion providers who mail pills across state lines from out-of-state prosecution. By the end of 2024, clinicians working through shield laws were facilitating an average of 12,330 abortions per month, according to data from #WeCount, a research project by the Society of Family Planning. Enraged by this development, anti-abortion advocates have in recent months stepped up their campaign to crush abortion pill providers. In his cease-and-desist letters, Paxton – a Republican who is running to become a US senator – repeatedly cited the Comstock Act of 1873, an anti-vice law that bans the mailing of abortion-related materials. Although legal experts have long regarded the Comstock Act as a dead letter, several anti-abortion activists now believe that the fall of Roe has left the federal government free to fully enforce the act. Alongside 15 other state attorneys general, Paxton earlier this summer signed onto a letter imploring Congress to pass a law that would pre-empt states' shield laws. He has also sued a New York-based doctor whom he accused of mailing abortion pills into Texas. Then, after a New York county court official said that the state's shield law prohibited New York from enforcing a fine against the doctor, Paxton sued the official. Paxton's cease-and-desist letters also follow similar letters sent by the Arkansas attorney general, Republican Tim Griffin. In July, Griffin sent a cease-and-desist letter to Possibility Labs, the parent company of Plan C, and to Mayday Medicines, the parent company of Mayday Health. Like Plan C, Mayday Health offers information about abortion pills, but does not directly sell them. Other anti-abortion activists are going after abortion providers through other legal avenues. A Texas man who said that Coeytaux supplied abortion pills to aid his female partner's abortion has also sued Coeytaux in a federal wrongful death lawsuit. The man is being represented in court by Jonathan Mitchell, an anti-abortion attorney who masterminded a six-week abortion ban that took effect in Texas in 2021. Last week, Mitchell filed another federal wrongful death lawsuit against a different abortion provider.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store