Henrietta Lacks Unethical

795 Words2 Pages

There are many ways to gather information and learn about a new subject and some of those ways are cruel, inhumane, and plain torturous. There is no hiding the fact that there are unethical experiments happening everyday all throughout the world, but there is also no hiding the fact that some unethical experiments have helped researchers and scientists significantly. Everyone’s who acts on these unethical experiments have the goal to be able to understand the world and how everything fits and works well together. The lab rats or test subjects pay a price of pain and can even lead to death all for nothing because, more than likely, there is a better, more ethical, way of finding the same information. There are many different opinions on these …show more content…

This was a woman who was born in 1920 and passed away in 1951 from Cervix cancer, yet, in some form, people believe she is still alive to this very day. Henrietta Lacks may not be able to survive this long but her cells surely can. This has helped scientists majorly. They wanted to grow cells out of a person’s body in a petri-dish but the cells never survived and duplicated. But, Henrietta’s Cervix cancer cells worked exceptionally well with the tests and duplicated, survived, and strived. They were able to test her cells with all viruses and it all helped majorly with the information we know now. Factories grew, rumors spread, and soon everyone knew about Henrietta’s unique cells and the testing grew from there. Scientists were able to find the cure or vaccination for Polio and many other diseases and …show more content…

For example, in 1956na d 1957 the US Army did biological warfare experiments in the cities of Savannah, Georgia and Avon Park, Florida. They released infected mosquitos to see Yellow Fever and Dengue Fever could spread. This ended with many researchers contracting the illness and dying. The people of these cities were never warned, and contracted fevers, respiratory problems, stillbirths, encephalitis, and Typhoid. Several people died when there were easier and more ethical ways of testing the spread of viruses and fevers. This may seem unexpectedly worthless and shocking but this is only one of the billions of unethical experiments that have happened all throughout our history and still continue to take place

Open Document