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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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    Henrietta Lacks Critique

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    but I am aware there won’t be much of an ending since it is a factual book. I would like to know the outcomes of Joe and Deborah’s lives‚ after all of the hardships they have been through this far. Mostly‚ I would like to see more information on the HeLa cells‚ also information about Henrietta’s family.      In conclusion‚ after reading half of the book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks‚ I have learned a substantial amount about Henrietta Lacks and how her cells were taken without her permission

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    family should receive some type of compensation. According to Martyn Drakard‚ “Henrietta’s cells have done and continue to do immense good”(icgalegroup.com). There are many multi-billion dollar corporations that exist only because of Henrietta and HeLa cells. While the Lacks family

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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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    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 after her death‚ HeLa cells are still being used for scientific research. A curious biology student known as Rebecca Skloot wrote The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. When Skloot was 16‚ she was taking a biology course at a community college for high school credit because

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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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    Henrietta Lacks Inequality

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    Inequalities of Race In The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks‚ race is one of the main themes as Skloot tells her story about Henrietta. When Henrietta goes to the doctor to discover some pain that she has and how the doctors took samples out of her without her consent. Since she is African American‚ the doctors assume that she is uneducated and do not tell her what is wrong with her body. Henrietta was not the only one though‚ in the 1950’s doctors attempted various procedures on African Americans

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    “Night Doctors” Chapter 21 “Since at least the 1800s‚ black oral history has been filled with tales of “night doctors” who kidnapped black people for research.” (Page 165) The author of “The immortal life of Henrietta Lacks” Rebecca Skloot goes back and forth from Henrietta’s personal and scientific history within the book. In chapter 21 Rebecca finally meets most of Henrietta’s children and goes through a test to see if she’s worthy of their mothers information but‚ while discussing with the family

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    Henrietta Lacks

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    After reading the book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks‚ what stood out was the root of how Henrietta’s cells went universal. A sample of cervical tissue was taken and a doctor asked David or Day to do an autopsy on Henrietta for the sake of their children. By using Normandale’s College Library course quick start‚ searching for an article of interest took some time. In Academic Search Premier‚ I read a few like Our Body‚ Our Cells; and Returning the Blessings Of an Immortal Life. I then typed

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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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