Rebecca West

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    The Case of Belle Gibson In the following case study we see the negative effects of breaking down these barriers and not having the third party to censor the content that celebrities are publishing. Annabelle Natalie “Belle” Gibson is a 24 year old blogger who claimed to have battled cancer through alternative medicine. She fabricated stories about how she self-treated her cancer by dieting. She also invented a Smartphone Application and wrote a book about her “healthy lifestyle”. She spread…

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    Henrietta's family is popular in the health field, they cannot afford health insurance.. Rebecca writes about Henrietta's family being unwealthy even with their mothers popularity in health stating, “She's the most important person in the world and her family living in poverty. If our mother is so important to science, why can't we get health insurance?” (Skloot, The immortal life of Henrietta Lacks, 2010, p. 168). Rebecca Skloot highlights the many forms of injustice brought upon Henrietta…

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    develop treatments for various genetic, chronic and difficult diseases. Rebecca Skloot became interested after hearing about these immortal cells as a student.. Her teacher mentioned how cell reproductions were, “…beautiful…like a perfectly choreographed dance.” (Skloot, 2010). However if there is a mistake, it can lead to variations and mutations such as cancer. In her book, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” Rebecca Skloot uncovers the truth behind Henrietta’s story and also shares…

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    didn’t think they would do any wrong. That’s until they collected a sample of her cancer cells without her permission. This started a whole new world for the medical field and in the end was the sole reason for many medical breakthroughs. The author, Rebecca Skloot does an excellent job at retelling Henrietta’s story. Skloot adds in so many…

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    The story of Henrietta Lacks is truly a unique story, grounded in family, hardship and scientific discovery. The story behind the “HeLa” cells and the family behind the woman who had “immortal cells” is very dramatic. Henrietta Lacks, a thirty-one year old black woman is diagnosed with cervical cancer that rapidly spreads. Stricken by poverty, Lacks family is unable to financially support her in treatment. The cancer soon overtakes Lacks body, and she dies, leaving behind her husband and five…

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    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is the story of a lower class, poor tobacco farmer, Henrietta Lacks who unknowingly has helped millions of people, after her death. Henrietta Lacks had discovered that a small “knot” in her stomach area, was actually cervical cancer, but the novel does not focus on her cancer, rather it focuses on her life, death, the issues her family faced with the medical field, and how her cells have saved the lives of millions of people. This novel is split into three…

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    The Immortal LIfe of Henrietta Lacks is the story of cell research developing and the story of Rebecca Skloot and Deborah Lacks learning about the elusive Henrietta Lacks. It is a true story written by Skloot, and was eventually published February 10, 2010. The author also does a good job of joining the scientific aspects of Henrietta’s life while still holding on to the social aspects of the book, as well as making it easy to read for people who don’t know much about the going ons of science.…

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    Rosalind Franklin began her work as soon as possible and continued working until she was truly physically unable to. In 1956, age 36, Franklin discovered that she had ovarian cancer (Biography “Rosalind Franklin”). How she came to develop this cancer is debated, whether is was due to the radiation of working with x-ray crystallography (Bagley) or possibly that it was the wicked irony of the gene being in her own DNA due to the fact that Ashkenazi Jews have a “hereditary predisposition to ovarian…

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    than three, and be specific.) I take great pride in being acknowledged in a recent Nature scientific journal publication entitled “Epigenetic Editing of Ascl1 gene in Neural Stem Cells by Optogenetics,” which stems from my work as a research intern at the Indiana University School of Medicine. I am also proud to have had the opportunity to present my research work as a semi-finalist at the Armed Forces-sponsored Southern California Junior Sciences and Humanities Symposium. Last but not least, I…

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    in order to use them and attempt to grow them in a lab. Taking cells from unexplainable diagnostics without the patient’s consent for research purposes is beneficial for the medical use by future generations, but is immoral. In the story told by Rebecca Skloot, she unravels the deeper aspect of Henrietta’s…

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