“The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks”
By: Rebecca Skloot
In this painfully detailed account of the life, death, and immortality of an African American woman Henrietta Lacks, author Rebecca Skloot sheds light on an example of why the African American community is fearful of medical assistance. Henrietta Lacks was a woman suffering from cervical cancer. She attended Johns Hopkins hospital for her treatment. However, neither she nor her family was informed that a sample of her cells both from her cervix and cancerous tumor were taken and used for medical experimentation. Her cells created a scientific revolution within the medical realm because they allowed scientists to experiment on her disposable stolen cells. Skloot exposes the mistreatment and malpractice of doctors and scientists in the 50’s and illustrates not only the physical suffering that Henrietta Lacks went through, but also the residual effects and anguish that her family had to endure. Remaining as residents in the inner city of Baltimore, MD the descendant of Henrietta Lacks have been plagued with poverty, poor health, violence, and all of this was spurred primarily because of not knowing what happened to their mother.
In the science realm the cells stolen from Lacks were known simply as HeLa for the first two letters of her first and last name. Speculations over the years reported her name as Helen Lane, Henrietta Leaks, or some other random interpretation of who HeLa could stand for. The Lacks children were not informed of the use their mothers’ cells or the scientific revolution she assisted with. This book not only discusses the medical injustice that Henrietta endured but her oldest daughter Elise as well. Born with a mild mental disability as the result of her parents suffering from syphilis Elise was checked into Crownsville hospital for the Negro insane and after the death of her mother she died alone and forgotten at the age of 15. Skloot details the mission she and Lacks daughter Deborah to discover what happened not only to Henrietta’s cells but to Deborah’s big sister. This author masterfully and respectfully brings the reader into the lives of a family who have lived their entire life with the short end of the stick but still manages to maintain a strong sense of family and loyalty. This page turner will open the eyes of the reader and bring them into the world of medical conspiracy, faith, illegal medical experimentation, family, and truth. I recommend this to any and everyone to inform themselves on the history of where Western medicine has come from and the numerous unnamed subjects it used and mutilated in the name of science.
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