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    cures to be discovered. Researchers for decades have turned to human tissue samples for some insight and profit on the biological vulnerabilities that have surfaced through out human history. The author of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Rebecca Skloot raises the subject of human tissue samples through her piece on the first immortal cells discovered and the advances it caused in the field of medical science. Unfortunately, the human body is designed in a way where while our biological make

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    “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” by Rebecca Skloot, is a story of a young mother who dies of cervical cancer and whose cells are taken without her consent for research. These cells, known as HeLa, go on to provide many important scientific discoveries. However, the cells are very controversial as her family is never compensated or given information about what these cells are used for. Henrietta’s cancer is found late and severe. She dies, leaving behind a husband, five children, and her immortal

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    segregated society. Suffering for the remainder of her life. Each of these obstacles like a bombshell, altering the life of a poor black woman named Henrietta Lacks. In the New York Times bestseller novel The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, author Rebecca Skloot reveals the untold and often unknown story behind the woman whose cells helped create some of the most profound contributions in medical history. Born and raised in Virginia in 1920, Lacks was a typical black southerner, growing up impoverished

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    As seen in Rebecca Skloot’s book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Henrietta Lacks’s education level, race, and gender hindered the treatment she received at Johns Hopkins. Henrietta’s cells were being used with “consent”, but Henrietta herself may have not understood what the doctor’s consent form was truly asking her for. The type of medical treatment and doctor interaction Henrietta received may have differed if she had a different education level, race, and gender. One way that Henrietta’s

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    Rebecca Skloot the author of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks became obsessed with learning the story behind Henrietta Lacks when hearing about her and her cells in a college biology class. She wanted to know more and find out who this woman was and why her cells were so important to science because there was little known about her. Henrietta Lacks was an African American woman whose cancer cells were the first ever immortal cell line in science. Skloot decides to tell their story but when she

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    much easier to those born into a privilege, which is a right, immunity, or benefit enjoyed only by a person beyond the advantages of most. It is apparent that power and privilege go hand in hand. In the book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Rebecca Skloot focuses on two stories: the development of the HeLa cells and the lives of Henrietta’s family members. While in the scientific world of HeLa cells, the power is held by the doctors such as George Gey and others because of their rank in society

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    Lauren Duckowrth Mr. Sanders Anatomy and Physiology 8 December 2015 Introduction “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” by Rebecca Skloot, is the story of a young mother who is diagnosed and treated for cervical cancer. During her cancer treatment, her cells are taken without her consent for research. These cells, known as HeLa, go on to provide many important scientific discoveries. However, the cells are very controversial as her family is never compensated or given the proper information about

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    In the novel The Immortal life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot, the story of Henrietta Lacks, an African American woman, whose suffering changed the course of medical research is told through the eyes of the Lacks family. Skloot explains the story told to her by the Lacks family after much convincing that Thirty year old Henrietta Lacks was desperately looking for help in 1951 at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore for what she found and called a "knot" on her cervix. She was diagnosed with

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    life of Henrietta Lacks is the breathtaking story of an African-American woman. Henrietta Lacks was a simple poor tobacco farmer whose cells were laboratory grown in 1951 by Doctor George Gey (Skloot 4). The cells are still universal in the world. Rebecca Skloot, a science journalist who dedicated more than ten years of research and dedication to know the Lacks family, writes the story. Rebecca’s interest in the story of Henrietta was when a teacher mentioned a casually in the class where Rebecca’s

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    Miguel Iniguez Diaz Eileen Apperson English 1A 21 September 2017 Rebecca Skloot: Objective or Subjective? Henrietta Lacks was a woman from the 1950s who was diagnosed with cervical cancer. Since she was an African American female with low income, her only choice in hospital was Hopkins. A doctor took a sample of her cells without her permission, which led to the discovery of the immortal HeLa cells. In the ethics of journalism, the debate between objectivity and subjectivity has been discussed

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