The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks

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The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by: Rebecca Skloot has a lot of themes, but one that is most relevant in my opinion is the racial politics of medicine. Throughout the chapters, there were examples of how Henrietta, being African American, prevented her from receiving the same treatment as the white woman sitting right next to her in the waiting room. The story begins with Henrietta going to Johns Hopkins Hospital and asking a physician to check a “knot on her womb.” Skloot describes that Henrietta had been having pain around that area for about a year, and talked about it with her family, but did not do anything until the pains got intolerable. The doctor near her house had checked if she had syphilis, but it came back negative, and he recommended her to go to John Hopkins, a known university hospital that was the only hospital in the area that would treat African American patients during the era of Jim Crow. It was a long commute, but they had no choice. Patient records detail some of her prior history and provide readers with background knowledge: Henrietta was one of ten siblings, having six or seven years of schooling, five children of her own, and a past of declining medical treatments. The odd thing was that she did not follow up on upcoming clinic visits. The tests discovered a purple lump on the cervix about the size of a nickel. Dr. Howard Jones took a sample around the tissue and sent it to the laboratory. In the beginning of chapter two, Skloot describes that Loretta Pleasant aka Henrietta Lacks was born on August 1, 1920 in Roanoke, Virginia. Henrietta’s mom passed away in 1924 after giving birth to her tenth child. Her dad took the children back to Clover, Virginia where the children were split up to live with ... ... middle of paper ... ...iving samples of these new HeLa cells to his colleagues. Finally, Henrietta had to go through a lot physically as well as medically, but on top of that she had to abide by the segregated laws that told her she would not be looked at the same as a woman who was white. That led to Henrietta not getting the right information told to her as well as the right treatment to go along with that. As a result, she had to go through excruciating pain while the doctors told her that she would be fine and that she should go home until her next checkup. With the doctor not telling the truth, he is making Henrietta go through the travel knowing that she will probably complain about a pain that is not brought as a caution. Doctors never looked at Henrietta as a person, but as HeLa (her cells). The only cells that could duplicate and made advancements in the world as time went on.

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