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The injustice of Henrietta's immortality

By Jonathan Beard

17 February 2010

IN 1951, Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer in Baltimore, Maryland. Weeks before, her doctor had removed a sliver of her tumour and preserved it. Lacks’s body ended up in an unmarked grave, while her cancerous cells – named HeLa – can today be found by the trillions in virtually every biomedical lab on Earth.

Rebecca Skloot does a good job explaining the science of this immortal cell line, and a superb job with the often tragic history of Lacks’s family, whose already hard lives were ripped still further apart when they learned, very belatedly, what had been done with her cells.…

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