Henrietta Lacks Ethics

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Throughout the book “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” the author, Rebecca Skloot, constantly depicts two very different sides to the story of Henrietta Lacks. On one hand, there is the Lacks family; who have fought for the compensation for the work that HeLa cells have done, especially since they were essentially taken from Henrietta and used without her informed consent. On the other hand, there is the scientific community; without the taking of HeLa cells, the understanding of chemotherapy and tissue culturing, and a vaccine for polio, would not be possible today. Although the ethical circumstances for the taking and use of HeLa cells weren’t necessarily just, the use of the cells were more importantly highly impactful in the scientific …show more content…

Skloot describes how, “When Southam began injecting people with HeLa cells in 1954, there was no formal research oversight in the United States.” (98) Southam’s use of HeLa cells sparked major outrage after headlines reading “PATIENTS INJECTED WITH CELLS NOT TOLD THEY WERE CANCER … SCIENTIFIC EXPERTS CONDEMN ETHICS OF CANCER INJECTION” surfaced. (99) In the end, the Medical Grievance Committee of the Board of Regents found Southam and his fellow researcher, Mandel, guilty of “fraud or deceit and unprofessional conduct in the practice of medicine.” (100) This trial lead to a major change in the policy of the NIH, making it so that proposals for research on human subjects had to be reviewed by independent review boards, ensuring that research done would meet ethical requirements. Henrietta’s cells still inspires important discussion on medical ethics -- as Debra DeBruin, director of the University of Minnesota Center for Bioethics states, “Researchers can take away an awareness of the impact that research can have on people. Rebecca Skloot does a great job of capturing different perspectives on the issues. Hearing a story like Henrietta Lacks’ takes us out of a purely scientific research perspective and

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