In 1925, Edwards and her husband moved to
Jersey City, New Jersey, and each entered medical practice. She became a speaker on public health and a natural childbirth advocate while serving the European immigrant community of
Hudson County, New Jersey. In 1931, she joined the staff of
Margaret Hague Hospital in Jersey City, but she was not admitted to residency in obstetrics and gynecology there until 1945. Edwards returned to Washington in 1954 and taught obstetrics at
Howard University Medical School. She would not accept a position as department chair because of her religious objections to abortion. She was the medical adviser to the
National Association of Colored Women's Clubs. She chaired the Maternal Welfare Committee of the District of Columbia
Urban League. At the age of 60, Edwards helped found Our Lady of Guadeloupe Maternity Clinic in
Hereford, Texas, a mission serving Mexican
migrant worker families. She donated more than a third of the money needed for the building's construction costs, and worked there without pay. She served at the mission until 1965 when a
heart attack led her to leave and move back to Washington. She worked there at the
Office of Economic Opportunity and
Project Head Start until her retirement in 1970. ==Personal life==