Baby Delivered by C-Section from Brain-Dead Mother in Georgia
When a person becomes brain-dead, their body begins to shut down, even if machines can keep it going a little longer. But when someone’s carrying a baby, that decision suddenly becomes a lot more complicated. That’s what happened in Georgia, where a woman declared brain dead was kept on life support so her pregnancy could continue. Now, months later, the baby has been born.
Adriana Smith, a Georgia woman who was declared brain dead in February, gave birth via emergency C-section on June 13. Her baby, a boy named Chance, arrived prematurely and weighed just 1lb 13oz at birth. He's currently in a neonatal intensive care unit, fighting to grow stronger.
“He’s expected to be OK,” said Smith’s mother, April Newkirk, in an interview with local station. “He’s just fighting. We just want prayers for him. Just keep praying for him. He’s here now.”
Smith is expected to be removed from life support, Newkirk added. Smith’s story first came to public attention after it was revealed that her family believed they had no say in whether life support could be withdrawn.
According to Newkirk, her daughter initially went to the hospital complaining of a severe headache. She was given medication and sent home. But the next day, her condition worsened dramatically, and she woke up gasping for breath. She was rushed back to the hospital, where doctors discovered blood clots in her brain. Within hours, she was declared brain dead.
That was back in February. Smith was around 18 weeks pregnant at the time.
Smith’s family says Georgia law forced her to stay on life support, leaving them powerless.
What followed was a harrowing period for her family, not just because they were grieving, but because they felt powerless. Georgia’s six-week abortion ban, which includes language related to “fetal personhood,” seemed to force a medical and legal standoff. Smith's family says doctors told them that, because of the law, they were required to keep Smith on life support to give her baby a chance of survival.
“We didn’t have a choice or a say about it,” Newkirk said, before Chance was born. “We want the baby. That’s a part of my daughter. But the decision should have been left to us – not the state.”Newkirk explained that they were told the hospital had no other option. The medical team, she said, felt bound by state law. The hospital declined to confirm or deny that account, citing patient privacy rules.
In a general statement, however, the hospital said it “uses consensus from clinical experts, medical literature, and legal guidance” to help providers make decisions that align with Georgia’s laws. Their focus, it said, remains on “the safety and well-being of the patients we serve.”

Disputes over Georgia law in Smith’s case highlight fears that fetal personhood can override a woman’s rights, even after death.
But not everyone agrees on what Georgia law says in cases like this. The office of Georgia’s attorney general, Chris Carr, responded to the controversy by saying the law does not require doctors to keep someone alive once they’ve been declared brain dead.
“Removing life support is not an action with the purpose to terminate a pregnancy,” said Carr’s spokesperson Kara Murray.That gap between how the law is interpreted and how it’s applied in practice has been a flashpoint for reproductive rights advocates. Legal experts and advocates have warned for years that fetal personhood laws could result in situations where the pregnant person’s body becomes secondary, even in death.
In Smith’s case, many say, is exactly what they feared. For Newkirk, however, the legal debate pales in comparison to the emotional toll.

Despite everything, she holds tightly to her grandson’s fight for life as a small but vital source of hope amid the pain. Baby Chance was born under unimaginable circumstances and is now receiving care from dedicated doctors.
Around him is a family still mourning the loss of Smith, yet still holding onto hope for the future. Though Smith’s life ended in February, her story, and that of her son, has only just begun.