Arab Times

Caring for girl amid brain-death debate ‘worth it’

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In this Dec 23, 2015 file photo, a photo of Jahi McMath is shown on a video screen next to her uncle Timothy Whisenton at a news conference in San Francisco. (AP) The mother of a girl at the center of a medical and religious debate over brain death said she does not regret moving from California to New Jersey so her daughter could receive care after being declared dead.

Nailah Winkfield told reporters Tuesday that she gave up everything for daughter Jahi McMath.

“Everything that I did, from selling my house, to quitting my job, to moving across the country and taking all that time away from my family, it was all worth it,” Winkfield said.

She has said doctors declared Jahi dead on June 22 from excessive bleeding and liver failure after an operation to treat an intestinal issue.

Jahi had been declared dead in December 2013 at age 13 after suffering irreversib­le brain damage during surgery in California to remove her tonsils. A coroner signed a death certificat­e.

Winkfield refused to accept the conclusion and took Jahi to New Jersey, which accommodat­es religions that don’t recognize brain death.

Winkfield said Tuesday that her daughter grew and went through puberty — evidence she was not dead.

“There’s no way in the world that I would be holding onto a corpse for 4-1/2 years,” she said.

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