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    Also in Henrietta Lacks’ case her cells were used for good and they have benefitted the entire world because of the many cures it has bought. And George Gey had not taken a sample of her tissue to sell her cells or become rich off of them‚ but simply for science. He only used HeLa cells for research purposes and to find cures and he was just giving them away to researchers in order for them to also do research

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    for research purposes‚ Wharton helped himself to a few samples of her cervix without the consent of Henrietta Lacks or her family. He then sent the tissues to a specialist by the name of George Gey. George Gey and his wife Margaret had been studying and growing cell cultures for years. With that being said‚ Gey and his wife grew Henrietta’s samples in a test tube in a lab at Johns Hopkins hospital. He eventually realized that these cells were not normal. They were immortal. And even now‚ fives decades

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    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks Immortal cells taken by a patient without their consent changed the medical world drastically. Not only was the polio vaccine influenced because of the HeLa cells‚ but research was also enhanced for cures on different illnesses around the world. How can what seems so unethical turn to be entirely beneficial to our world and our generation? The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks opens up the process of how these famous HeLa cells were discovered‚ and the

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    I believe that if anyone should have received compensation for HeLa cells‚ it should be George Gey because he found that the cells were ‘immortal’ and sent them to researches for free to improve the wellbeing of the world. Without Gey‚ the medical world would be far behind and the amount of lives saved from the vaccines created on these cells should be enough saved for the Lacks

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    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks summary Chapter one Chapter one is about when Henrietta lacks is in the Hopkins hospital explaining to the doctor that she has a lump. Henrietta had felt this lump for a long time but though it was because of her pregnancy of her 5th child. The gynecologist looks at her medical history; notices that Henrietta had a list of untreated medical problems. The chapter also explains the time of period it was in as it describes how they were segregated. They had

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    hospital the right to take tissue from her for research purposes? Do you think Henrietta was able to understand what she was signing? F. Chapter 4: “The Birth of HeLa” (1951) 1. What is your impression of Dr. Gey? What evidence of his dedication to his work is given in this chapter? 2. Why did Dr. Gey give samples of the HeLa cells to his colleagues? 3. What are your thoughts on the issue of sterile procedures in the lab‚ given the descriptions of the lab in this chapter? G. Chapter 5: “Blackness Be Spreadin

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    “For me‚ it’s writing a book and telling people about this story.” Freelance science writer who specializes in science and medicine‚ Rebecca Skloot‚ started her writing career with her first book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. This book took Rebecca more than a decade to research and write. It instantly hit the New York Times best-seller list where it has remained for more than four years since its publication in 2010. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks was about an African-American woman

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    treatment.’ But by the time she found out‚ it was too late" (48).   "’What would really upset Henrietta is that fact that Dr. Gey never told the family anything--we didn’t know nothing about those cells and he didn’t care.  That just rubbed us the wrong way.  I just kept asking everybody‚ ’Why didn’t they say anything to the family?’  They knew how to contact us!  If Dr. Gey wasn’t dead‚ I think I would have killed him my self" (169). "Since at least the 1800s‚ black oral history has been filled with

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    1. What illness did Cootie have as a child? Cootie illness was Polio; he got sick at the age nine. 2. Cootie seems to know and understand a little bit about HeLa cells‚ but he believes that Henrietta’s spirit is still present in her cells. What does Cootie think about the reason that HeLa cells were used to develop a polio vaccine? Because Henrietta saw how bad Cootie’s condition was and she always wanted to fix it. 3. Where does Cootie think Henrietta’s cancer came from? Cootie thinks

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    Do The Ends Ever Justify The Means? In her novel‚ The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks‚ author Rebecca Skloot addresses the many variations of ethics by telling the readers about the life of a poor African American Southern tobacco worker living in a time where racism was apparent. In 1951‚ Henrietta was diagnosed with cervical cancer when she was 30 and reseachers had taken her cells without her permission. The major concern that arises in the novel in my opinion is the lack of informed consent

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