Family gives update on baby after brain dead woman was kept alive to give birth due to abortion law

The mother of Adriana Smith, an Atlanta woman who was declared brain dead whilst pregnant, has given an update on the newborn months after its mother’s life support was switched off.

Smith was a registered nurse and mom-to-be when she suffered a medical emergency in February 2025. Doctors at Emory University Hospital later declared her brain-dead.

However, the experts felt they were legallyobligated to keep Smith on life support after she was found to be around nine weeks pregnant.

Adriana Smith was kept alive by doctors despite being brain dead because of a 2019 bill (April Newkirk/GoFundMe)

In a new update, the woman’s family have said that the newborn continues to fight for his life.

According to reports, the child, who has since been named Chance, weighed just 1 lb. 13 oz. when he was born via emergency cesarean section on June 13.

Smith’s mother, April Newkirk, has recently revealed that Chance now weighs under 5lbs.

It’s understood he will potentially be able to leave medical care at the end of September or at the beginning of October.

“His weight is gradually picking up, but the breathing is what we’re concerned with,” Newkirk said on Wednesday (August 27), as reported by PEOPLE magazine.

“So, he’s making a little bit of progress, but still some things to do.”

Newkirk previously said that the family ‘just want prayers’ for Chance so he can become healthy and strong.

Adriana Smith’s mother details ‘torturous’ months

The Atlanta woman's life support machine was shut off four days after her baby was delivered (April Newkirk/GoFundMe)The Atlanta woman's life support machine was shut off four days after her baby was delivered (April Newkirk/GoFundMe)

The Atlanta woman’s life support machine was shut off four days after her baby was delivered (April Newkirk/GoFundMe)

Newkirk has said it has been ‘hard’ to deal with Smith’s death over the last couple of months.

This was due to the so-called ‘heartbeat bill’ that Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law in 2019 to prevent abortions from being performed once fetal cardiac activity is detected, which typically occurs at about six weeks’ gestation.

She confessed to 11Alive: “Something’s been taken away from us, it’s hard. You know, I think about her every day, all the time.

The bereaved mother has previously been vocal regarding the decision to keep her child alive throughout her pregnancy, remarking it was ‘torture’ to watch her suffer.

“She’s been breathing through machines for more than 90 days,” she once explained.

“It’s torture for me. I see my daughter breathing, but she’s not there. And her son — I bring him to see her.”

Why was Adriana Smith kept alive?

The Life Act, ushered in following the 2022 overturn of Roe v. Wade, states that ‘no abortion shall be performed’ in the state of Georgia six weeks after gestation.

The legislation only becomes void if the pregnant woman suffers ‘a medical emergency or medically futile pregnancy’.

Despite suffering her own medical emergency, doctors at Emory University Hospital believed switching off Smith’s life support would violate these laws.

They therefore kept the woman alive until her baby was born, causing experts and Smiths’ family to debate the ethical implications of the heartbeat bill.

“I want them to know that this didn’t have to happen,” said Newkirk of the medical experts’ decision.

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