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    Matter of Life and Death

    Brain-dead pregnant woman remains on life support despite husband's wishes

    Claire St. Amant
    Jan 6, 2014 | 1:05 pm

    A North Texas woman is making headlines across the country from the intensive care unit at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth. At 14 weeks pregnant, Marlise Munoz was rushed to the hospital on November 26, 2013, after her husband, Erick Munoz, reportedly found her unconscious.

    According to information released by the Crowley Professional Firefighters Association (where Erick and Marlise worked as paramedics), Marlise has not shown any brain activity since being admitted. It is believed she suffered a pulmonary embolism.

    Family members — including her husband — have publicly said they do not want to keep her on life support. Marlise is now 19 weeks pregnant. The couple already has a 1-year-old son, Mateo.

    SMU law professor and medical ethicist Tom Mayo says it's not illegal for a doctor to withdraw life support on a pregnant patient in Texas; it just means the hospital would lose immunity protection.

    It's an exceedingly rare situation, one that has shined a spotlight on a little-known portion of Texas law. "We have never had a case like this before," says hospital spokesperson J.R. Labbe.

    Labbe believes the hospital's hands are tied: "We can't withdraw treatment from a pregnant person as the law states."

    Labbe is referring to a section of the Texas Advance Directives Act that reads, "A person may not withdraw or withhold life-sustaining treatment under this subchapter from a pregnant patient." The hospital plans to keep Marlise on life support until the baby comes to term and is able to be delivered.

    "Mr. Munoz's issue is not with hospital. It is with the law," Labbe says.

    Others have called into question the hospital's interpretation of the law. Tom Mayo, an SMU law professor and medical ethicist, says it is not illegal for a doctor to withdraw life support on a pregnant patient in Texas; it just means that the hospital would lose the immunity protection guaranteed by the statute. As long as the hospital follows the Texas Advance Directives Act, it cannot be sued or subject to disciplinary action from professional boards.

    A separate section of the Texas Advance Directives Act states that nothing in the statute makes unlawful any action that would have been lawful before the act was passed in 1999. Because it wasn't previously illegal to take a pregnant woman off life support provided she had a living will or a designated surrogate, it isn't illegal now.

    Although it is not known if Marlise Munoz has a living will, her husband appears to be acting as her surrogate, meaning he has the right to make end-of-life decisions for his wife.

    "It puts the hospital in the position of choosing between what the surrogate wants and what the doctor and hospital want with their immunities," Mayo says. "To say that we are required by law to continue treatment on a pregnant patient and then invoke this statute, that just strikes me as wrong."

    There's another layer to the controversy: Is Marlise Munoz brain-dead and therefore no longer a patient at the hospital at all? "If Ms. Munoz is brain-dead, she does not have a terminal or irreversible condition. She has no condition," Mayo says.

    Mac Stewart, a health law lawyer with the firm Stewart & Strong, says the statute doesn't allow for existential arguments. "The bottom line is that you cannot withdraw life support if a patient is pregnant. It's as straightforward as it can be."

    The only question remaining for Stewart is when the fetus becomes viable and thus able to be delivered. Labor and delivery nurse Jillian Ludwig says 24 weeks is generally the soonest a fetus is determined viable.

    "Studies show that before that time, the chance of survival or any type of quality of life is too minimal, and the risk outweighs the benefit for the baby," Ludwig says.

    Marlise Munoz has been in the ICU at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth since November 26, 2013.

    Marlise Munoz
    Marlise Munoz Facebook
    Marlise Munoz has been in the ICU at John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth since November 26, 2013.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    holiday budgeting news

    Affluent Dallas neighbor boasts 4th biggest holiday spenders in 2025

    Amber Heckler
    Nov 20, 2025 | 9:03 am
    holiday shopping in 2025, Christmas presents wrapped under a tree
    Photo by Isaac Martin on Unsplash
    Flower Mound residents are expected to spend over $3,900 on their Christmas gifts this year, WalletHub found.

    Residents of Dallas' well-to-do suburb Flower Mound aren't stressing about stretching their holiday spending this year: A new report from WalletHub found Flower Mound residents have the fourth-largest holiday budgets in the nation for 2025.

    Gift givers in flourishing Flo-Mo are expected to spend $3,941 on their festive presents, says WalletHub's 2025 "Holiday Budgets by City" report.

    To determine the U.S. cities with the biggest holiday budgets, WalletHub's experts compared 558 cities across five categories: Income, age, a debt-to-income ratio, residents' monthly income-to-monthly expenses ratio, and their savings-to-monthly expenses ratio.

    According to the study's methodology, a consumer is considered to be in a "comfortable financial position to engage in holiday spending if they have: 1) enough emergency savings to cover at least six months of expenses and 2) a debt-to-income ratio smaller than 22 percent for a renter or 43 percent for a homeowner."

    The three U.S. cities that outrank Flower Mound with the loftiest holiday budgets are Palo Alto, California (No. 1); Mountain View, California (No. 2); and Newton, Massachusetts (No. 3). Palo Alto residents are expected to spend nearly $4,500 on their Christmas gifts this year, with the latter cities budgeting for $4,266 and $4,069, respectively.

    Flower Mound's current holiday budget is $400 higher than it was in 2024, when the city ranked No. 7 in WalletHub's top-10 list of cities with the biggest holiday spenders. It's also higher than the $3,485 projected budget from the 2023 report, when Flower Mound ranked No. 3 nationally.

    Festive neighbor Frisco has continued to slip farther outside of the top-10 for 2025 after previously ranking as the city with the third-highest holiday budgets in 2023. Frisco first fell into No. 11 last year, but now currently sits one spot lower as the U.S. city with the 12th largest holiday budget.

    Even with a continued dip in the rankings, Frisco residents are still expected to spend a lofty $3,491 on their holiday presents this year. They're definitely competing with Mr. Claus for the "best Christmas present" award.

    Dallas proper moved up the list into No. 193 with a $1,559 projected holiday budget this year, or $153 more than last year's budget. Fort Worth ranked No. 144 nationally with residents expected to spend $1,719 on their gifts, or $637 more than the previous year.

    These are the projected holiday budgets for cities elsewhere across North Texas:

    • No. 28 – Allen ($3,055)
    • No. 40 – Plano ($2,812)
    • No. 55 – McKinney ($2,502)
    • No. 56 – Carrollton ($2,498)
    • No. 82 – Richardson ($2,146)
    • No. 96 – North Richland Hills ($1,985)
    • No. 106 – Lewisville ($1,928)
    • No. 136 – Irving ($1,772)
    • No. 144 – Fort Worth ($1,719)
    • No. 150 – Grand Prairie ($1,703)
    • No. 172 – Denton ($1,621)
    • No. 182 – Arlington ($1,557)
    • No. 277 – Mesquite ($1,323)
    Regardless of the dollar amount, North Texans should pay attention to their spending and pick a budget that works for their financial situation, experts say. The National Retail Federation expects holiday sales to surpass $1 trillion this year, and the report warns credit card debt is a major challenge faced by many Americans as they plan their holiday shopping sprees.

    "The holidays bring plenty of joy, but they can also spark seasonal stress, much of it tied to overspending," the report's author wrote. "In Q3 2025, the average household carried $10,227 in credit card debt, up 2.3 percent from the year before, according to WalletHub data. Adding holiday shopping on top of that can quickly increase the financial strain, especially if balances roll into the new year."

    Other Texas cities that made it into the top 100 biggest holiday spenders include:

    • No. 19 – Pearland ($3,277)
    • No. 20 – The Woodlands ($3,265)
    • No. 22 – Sugar Land ($3,191)
    • No. 31 – Cedar Park ($3,028)
    • No. 34 – League City ($2,997)
    • No. 47 – Round Rock ($2,641)
    holiday budgetsholidayschristmaswallethubflower mounddallasfort worth
    news/city-life
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