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    In the book The Immortal life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot. The author tells the story of a women whose cells were used for scientific experiments. The story begins with the main character‚ Henrietta Lacks‚ who is going to John Hopkins Hospital to have a lump on her cervix looked at by doctors. Henrietta had been experiencing pain since the birth of her fourth child. She has several theories as to what is causing this pain‚ such as complications with childbirth or an STD which she may have

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    The third section of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks was about the journey of Deborah and the author‚ Rebecca Skloot finding information about her mother’s cells and sister‚ Elsie. Elsie was forgotten by her family because she was sent away to an insane asylum. Doctors diagnosed Elsie with idiocy‚ which was caused by Henrietta’s condition with syphilis. Doctors in the Crownsville Hospital conducted research on some of the patients without any consent. This was another example of doctors taking

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    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot produces many different themes. Many of which continue to play a big role in today’s society. Throughout the novel‚ the author reveals the story of a woman who shook the scientific world with just her cells. Even today‚ her cells’ influence is still felt in medical research. However useful these cells are‚ obtaining them was very controversial. After reading the book‚ the main themes that stuck out in

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    Part two of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks discusses the fate of Henrietta’s cells after she passes away. George Gey‚ the doctor that originally received Henrietta’s cells without her permission‚ asks her husband if he can perform an autopsy on Henrietta so that he can gain more knowledge on her cells. He wanted as many of her organs as possible to see if they would grow like the HeLa cells. Day refused at first because he planned on having a funeral‚ but Dr. Gey insisted that he perform

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    Introduction “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” was written by Rebecca Skloot‚ to tell the story of Mrs. Lacks and her HeLa cells. Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer in 1951. A sample of her cancer cells was removed for research prior to her death. Her cells became the first to survive and multiply indefinitely in a lab. These cells have made many advances in medicine. However‚ the samples were taken without her permission or without her knowledge. The book covers five key ideas which

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    This novel goes through the story of a woman named Henrietta Lacks. The book is based of her story that started with a cancer that was discovered in her when she thought she was possibly pregnant because of a feeling of a knot on her cervix. Although she wasn’t pregnant they did find out she had a cervical cancer. Little did she know that some of her cancer tissue was removed and sent to George Gey’s lab in Hopkins. The scientist there‚ one named Gey ‚ have been trying to get human cells to divide

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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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    abandoned before birth and still turn out the way that most do‚ most creatures do benefit from having a mother and father‚ whether they be related to them genetically or emotionally‚ Deborah Lacks is not an exception to this. While Deborah Lacks was still a little girl‚ she lost her genetic mother‚ Henrietta Lacks‚ to cervical cancer‚ and due to this‚ she did not have the certain type of guidance that mothers can bestow upon their children. However‚ by losing her genetic mother‚ she had a spot for an

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    Rebecca Skloot’s‚ The Immortal life of Henrietta Lacks‚ resurrects the untold journey of HeLa cells and their source through the relaying research conducted by Skloot‚ effectively awakening the prevailing ethical issues associated with human experimentation and organ donation‚ which in essence reflects the bigotry and ongoing prejudice of African Americans during the 1950s. Skloot successfully crafts the novel‚ vigorously resuscitating the painful story of the Lacks’ through the several interviews she

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    One of the first major unethical events happened in chapter 3 when Henrietta went in for her first treatment. “But first – though no one had told Henrietta that TeLinde was collecting samples or asked if she wanted to be a donor – Wharton picked up a sharp knife and shaved two dime-sized pieces of tissue from Henrietta’s cervix: one from her tumor‚ and one from the healthy cervical tissue nearby” (Skloot 33). Although Henrietta had signed the consent form to perform any operative procedure‚ it states

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