1. Who wrote The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks and what year was it published? Rebecca Skloot wrote and published it in 2010. 2. What hospital treated Henrietta Lacks? Johns Hopkins treated Henrietta Lacks. 3. What are HeLa cells? HeLa cells are the "immortal cell line" derived from Henrietta's cervical cancer. They are immortal because they can reproduce without becoming "senescent." 4. What year did Henrietta Lacks pass away? Henrietta Lacks passed away in 1951. 5. What genre is this book? (Hint: it's not novel) This is a cultural history. 6. Who was the first person to culture the HeLa cells? George Gey was the first to culture it, but the Tuskegee Institute was the first to mass produce it. 7. What is the ethical dilemma the author lays out? The author contrasts the widespread medical benefits and opportunities given by Henrietta's immortal cell line with the Lacks family's condition. 8. What concepts or themes from other readings appear in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks? Medical Apartheid's history of black people's distrust of medicine, both explicitly in the segment with Bobetta Lacks talking about doctors grabbing people and implicitly in the ethical dilemma and in how the doctors hid information from her family. 9. What medical innovations have the HeLa cells made possible? Why? HeLa cells have improved research practices and made possible many new tests on in vitro tissue for medical therapies like the polio vaccine. The primary reason is that the HeLa cells reproduce consistently but are susceptible to disease like a normal human cell, so vaccines can be trialed against cells to be infected and get comparable results in vitro. They have also developed general tissue research practices like freezing cells or controlled somatic cell fusion because HeLa cells are abundant enough to try out these possibly damaging techniques. This has allowed innovation like corneal transplants 10. If health describes rules, regulations, and norms that contribute to physical and mental wellness, what insights does The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks make about "health?" Please use direct quotations. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks describes a transformation in medical research ethics to benefit patients' and subjects' health outcomes. Skloot compares the Lacks family's injustice with other unethical experiments to establish the active role research subjects should take in these projects. Lawrence Lacks summarizes their personal injustice well with, "If our mother so important to science, why can't we get health insurance?" (168) They have been kept in the dark on their mother, helped by the fact that they didn't inform Henrietta either. Skloot is arguing for the development of standards like legal standing of the Nuremberg Code as established by Southam's unethical experiments. Southam's injections of cancer into unconsenting subjects is described as "illegal, immoral, and deplorable," and "this case brought about one of the largest research oversight changes in the history of experimentation on humans" (135) because the ethics of research corresponds are the rules and norms that control patients' physical and mental wellness.