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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Henrietta Lacks had a large‚ religious family who lived their entire life in poverty. She and her husband‚ Day‚ grew up together on a tobacco farm‚ and received little education as children. Day was a handworker and provided for the family as best he could; however‚ he was unfaithful to his wife on multiple occasions. Throughout their marriage‚ Day had affairs where he would pick up sexually transmitted infections and spread them to Henrietta. They began having children when Henrietta was only
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learn a lot about them. Humans in books exhibit the best and worst of humankind. From them‚ I am able to learn about the human condition. I’ve recently read about two awe-inspiring humans that exhibit the best of humankind. “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” and “Iqbal” reveal that humans are driven by past personal injustices to strive for
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Do we own our bodily tissues? This question has came about in many different situations. One example is with the Lacks family. In 1951‚ doctors removed some of Henrietta Lack’s cells without consent and formed a line of immortal cells‚ her cells. The Lacks family had no idea about Henrietta’s immortal cells and didn’t find out for years. Care must be taken to protect the patients from having their cells stolen. But how much protection? Who should own the tissue after it has been removed from the
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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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see in “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” by Rebeca Skloot we see that was the many cases of blacks. Like Henrietta Lacks she was not treated equal to the whites‚ whites were lucky enough to be provided with a more privileged medical care. When blacks were left almost on the sidelines. Getting little medical help. When Henrietta lacks pasted away her family was left devastated. Skloot points out the irony of the first HeLa factory being established at the Tuskegee Institute‚ where black men were
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Ethics are what we use to determine what is right from wrong. In science‚ it’s a system of codes that describes what can and cannot be done by a scientist. When we talk about Henrietta Lacks cells‚ it’s a case of a sacrifice for the greater good. Although the cells were taken from her without her consent when she was receiving cancer treatments‚ those cells allowed for scientists to develop the first polio vaccines and test chemotherapy drugs. All of these things had a dramatic effect‚ as they were
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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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natural diseases. Scientific discovery helps catalyze the combat against these diseases to improve the quality of life. In the Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks‚ author Rebecca Skloot effectively shows how medical professionals develop scientific discoveries to cure diseases all over the world by emphasizing their effort. Skloot also effectively signifies how Henrietta didn’t complain about the medical treatment that she received‚ but rather was happy with the resources available to her. First of all‚ Skloot
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Who should profit from the HeLa cells in particular‚ and medical advances in general? Does the Lacks family have any claim to the money that has been made from HeLa? Laws control the lesser man. Right conduct controls the greater one. ~Chinese Proverb I find the question of who should reek the benefits of the HeLa cells in the Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks to be not just be a simple he or she answer (if that makes any sense)‚ but I find this question really asks something deeper. The questions
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