Here's the list of the Discussion Questions from the previous chapters we have read:
What is mitosis? What beneficial biological
processes involve mitosis? What happens when there is a mistake during the
process of mitosis?
According to Defler, how important was the discovery
of HeLa cells?
What did Henrietta’s first doctor assume the source
of the lump on Henrietta’s cervix was? What stereotype or bias might this
assumption be based upon?
Why did David Lacks take Henrietta to the public
wards at Johns Hopkins instead of a closer hospital?
Review the notes on Henrietta’s
medical history found on page 16. Based on the objective details in her medical
chart, what can you infer about Henrietta’s life and personality? How would you
describe Henrietta’s feelings about doctors?
What did Howard Jones find
“interesting” about Henrietta’s medical history? What does this finding suggest
about Henrietta’s cancer?
Compare the medical terms
describing Elsie’s condition with the terms used by Henrietta’s friends and
family. What are the suggestions made by the two sets of terms?
Contrast the working conditions
of black workers and white workers at the Sparrows Point Steel Mill.
Summarize Dr. TeLinde’s
position in the debate over the treatment of cervical cancer.
How did doctors justify using
patients in public hospital wards as medical research subjects without
obtaining their consent or offering them financial compensation? Do you agree
or disagree with their reasoning? Explain your answer.
Explain what an immortal cell
line is.
Analyze the consent statement
that Henrietta signed on page 31. Based on this statement, do you believe
TeLinde and Guy had the right to obtain a sample from her cervix to use in
their research? Do you think Henrietta would have given explicit consent to
have a tissue sample used in medical research if she had been asked? Do you
think she would have understood what was being asked of her? Explain your
answers.
Were cells taken only from
black patients? Were black patients generally treated differently from white
patients in the early 1950s? Explain your answers.
Chapter 4- 10
Summarize the main obstacles Gey and his assistants faced in their
effort to grow cells. What happened to the HeLa cells that Mary cultured?
Gey chose to give away samples of HeLa to his colleagues almost
immediately. Do you think this was a good decision? Explain your answer. Was
Henrietta informed that her cells were being used in Gey’s research?
What was Elsie’s early life like? Why did Henrietta and David
(Day) Lacks decide to place Elsie in the Hospital for the
Negro Insane?
Why do you think Henrietta initially chose not to tell people
about her cancer diagnosis?
What important information did Henrietta’s doctor fail to give her
before starting her cancer treatment? How did she react when this information
was eventually shared with her?
Describe the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. What do the Tuskegee
Syphilis Study and the Mississippi Appendectomies suggest about the history of
African Americans and medicine?
How does Deborah Lacks initially respond to Skloot’s request for
information? What questions does Deborah have about her mother? How does Day
initially respond to Skloot’s request for information?
What did Gey hope to accomplish with HeLa cells? What did HeLa
allow scientists to do for the first time?
Who was Alexis Carrel? Why did he win the Nobel Prize? What
controversial beliefs did Carrell have? What details suggest that Carrel’s
claims about the immortal cell line were not scientifically sound?
After her initial round of treatment, what did Henrietta’s doctors
assume about the effectiveness of the radium therapy?
How did her doctors react to Henrietta’s intuitive conviction that
the cancer was spreading inside of her? When did the doctors realize that
Henrietta had been correct about the growth of her cancer?
What does the use of the term “a miserable specimen” by Henrietta’s
doctors reveal about their attitude toward her?
While most accounts suggest that Henrietta never met George Gey or
knew about HeLa, Laure Aurelian says that Gey recounted meeting with Henrietta
before her death. Do you find this story believable? Use specific facts about
Henrietta, Gey, and/or medical practice in the 1950s to support your opinion.
Who is Courtney “Mama” Speed, and how is she connected to
Henrietta Lacks?
How was Cootie related to Henrietta? What illness did Cootie have
as a child?
Chapter 11-16
Describe the progression of Henrietta’s cancer in the eight months
between her diagnosis and her death.
Why did doctors stop giving Henrietta blood transfusions? What did
Henrietta’s friends and family do when they found out that she needed blood?
Why do you think they were willing to sacrifice to help her?
What was Henrietta’s final request? What does this request tell
you about her?
Why did Henrietta’s doctors need to ask for her family’s
permission to remove tissue samples after her death? How did Day initially
respond to their request? What made Day change his mind and allow the autopsy?
Explain how a neutralization test is used to determine a vaccine’s
efficacy. What unusual characteristics of HeLa cells made them ideal for use in
the polio vaccine trials?
Why did the Tuskegee Institute become involved in the mass
production of HeLa cells? How involved was the Institute?
Read & explanation of how a virus reproduces (page 97). Why
did the fact that HeLa cells are malignant make them particularly useful in the
study of viruses?
Why was the development of methods of freezing cells an important
scientific breakthrough?
Why did scientists want to be able to clone cells for research? Explain
the contribution that HeLa made to the emerging field of genetics.
Describe the role Microbiological Associates played in the
development of the field of cell culture, and the industry of selling HeLa
cells and other human biological materials.
Do you agree with Pomerant’s suggestion that Gey should have
“finished his own research” before releasing HeLa to the general public? In
what ways, if any, did Gey personally profit from the development of HeLa?
How soon after Henrietta’s death did the media attempt to write
about her?
What reasons did Berg give for wanting information about the woman
whose cells were used to grow HeLa? How did TeLinde, Gey, and others at Johns
Hopkins respond to Berg’s request? Why did they respond this way?
Summarize the various factual errors that appeared in the stories
about HeLa.
Why didn’t Henrietta’s family know that her cells were still
alive? Do you think that learning of HeLa soon after Henrietta’s death might
have changed her family members’ lives? Why?
What questions did Deborah have about her mother & sister? Why
do you think no one told her very much about them?