that discovered it “Heroes of Modern Medicine”. Many would argue that scientists had the right to take Henrietta’s samples‚ after all Henrietta signed “a form”. Many would justify the doctor’s actions and overlook misconduct or abuse of power as they neglected to inform Henrietta of their intentions in the name of medicine advancement. Yet‚ some would disagree. Henrietta was being treated for cancer‚ the form she signed was consent for treatment not for the removal and testing of her cells. The document
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It was there in that moment that HeLa became Henrietta Lacks: a person‚ a mother‚ a loved one. The name HeLa was so well known and widely worked with‚ yet Henrietta and her family were virtually unheard of. It is likely that this separation significantly contributed to the way Henrietta’s cells were sold and shared‚ morally detached from the woman they were
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The author creates interest by saying how she first found out about Henrietta and she wanted to find out more information about her. My reaction on Deborah is that the way she acting is alright because she deserves to know everything that has happened to her mother. The term “Jim Crow era” is talking about the time period where the only major hospital also treated black patients. My impression on Henrietta is very surprising because of how many siblings she has‚ the age she got pregnant‚ and the
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1) "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" (pg. 33). Lacks’s cells have been an immense help to the medical world‚ but even with that‚ it was not justifiable to remove her cells without her knowing. It was wrong for Dr. Lawrence Wharton‚ Jr. to remove the tissue from Lack because she was not given informed consent about the removal
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During the time of the experimentation of Henrietta Lacks cells‚ white people were seen as superior to blacks and the only hospital that were allowed to care for African Americans was John Hopkins Hospital. Even though this was the only hospital black people still weren’t given the same care as whites. Henrietta had come from a black community‚ so she and her family were looked down on in the health care community. Henrietta had originally gone to the doctor because she had a lump in her cervix and
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The Henrietta Lacks case brings up a lot of different issues‚ most of which have to do with ethical dilemmas. First off‚ Henrietta is an African American woman who came from a poor part of Virginia and was poorly educated and‚ unfortunately‚ so was most of her family. Where she grew up was mostly full of members of her family and ended up marrying her cousin‚ Day‚ now that is a heavily frowned upon in mainstream society but where she grew up it was normal. She and Day eventually moved to Baltimore
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Henrietta was born in 1920. She moved to Virginia in a city called Clover in 1924 when her mom passed away. Her father decides that taking care of all ten children is too much and he splits them up to live with family. Henrietta was put with her granddad that lived in a four-room lodge that was once possessed by slaves. When Henrietta was young and at the age she went to school‚ she was exceptionally popular particularly‚ because she was very pretty. She and her cousin Day‚ begin to have youngsters
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thousands of the cells named the hela strain. Wanting to make a polio vaccine. Finding out that the hela cells replicated with polio. The hela cells were injected with every type of virus to try and find a vaccination. Lastly the daughter of the Henrietta‚ Debora was highly curious of the mother she never was able to know. Doing research on her mother’s hela cells‚ she found there were thousands and thousands of these cells. She thought there were clones out there of her mother. Debora was finally
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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
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Photograph” 1. How does the author create an interest in learning more about the story of Henrietta Lacks? 2. How well does the author provide the reader with a sense of what this book is about? B. “Deborah’s Voice” 1. What is your impression of Deborah‚ given this brief excerpt? How does the author shape that impression? C. Chapter 1: “The Exam” (1951) 1. What does this chapter suggest to you about Henrietta Lacks’ ability to understand and make informed decisions about her treatment at the clinic?
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