Let’s hop on the Magic School Bus and jump back in time and into the life and cells of Henrietta Lacks! The use of Hela cells has raised questions about privacy and ethics in cell donation.Even though her cells were famous, most people didn’t know of Henrietta and her family until recently.Henrietta Lacks was a poor black woman who died of aggressive cervical cancer at a young age, but her immortal cells lived on. Here are the 3 of the most fascinating lessons I’ve discovered: Journalist Rebecca Skloot gets to the bottom of the story in her book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. They did all of this without her permission or the knowledge of her family. Today, long after her death, scientists across the world still grow her cells. Henrietta’s cells reproduced at an incredible rate. When they took her cells for biopsy scientists found something amazing. Henrietta Lacks was a poor tobacco farmer and mother of five young children who died of cancer These miracle cells have been around since the ‘50s, but most researchers don’t know their origin. They helped with everything from finding a cure for polio to discovering AIDs and cancer treatments. They are one of the most important tools in modern medicine. If you were to walk into any biomedical laboratory right now, you would come across HeLa cells. Listen to the audio of this summary with a free reading.fm account*:
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