A Life Cut Short When Antibiotics Stopped Working

Mallory’s mother, Diane Shader Smith, is telling her daughter’s story to the world. She wants people to know about Mallory and about the threat of antimicrobial resistance. She’s also collecting the stories of other people who have been made victims of this growing threat to humanity because she understands the difference stories make in ensuring people understand the gravity of antimicrobial resistance.


Honoring Her Daughter’s Legacy After a Long Battle With AMR

After Diane Shader Smith lost her daughter, Mallory, to a multidrug resistant infection, she turned her personal tragedy into a mission designed to inform people about antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and have the public coalesce around this expanding medical issue.


Diary of a Dying Girl, adapted from Salt in My Soul

This moving, heartfelt YA adaptation of Smith’s adult memoir, Salt in My Soul: An Unfinished Life, is based on diary entries Smith kept from age 16 until her death at 25 from cystic fibrosis, an often invisible disease. In middle school, she contracted Burkholderia cenocepacia (B. cepacia), a deadly bacteria known to infect those with cystic fibrosis.


Personal Stories Illuminate The Antimicrobial Resistance Crisis

The story of Mallory Smith is one poignant example of the impact of AMR on individuals and families. Diagnosed with cystic fibrosis at the age of three, Mallory’s life became entwined with the complications posed by the deadly bacteria Burkholderia cepacia, leading to numerous health challenges and hospitalizations.