Henrietta Lacks’ Immortal Cells: The Medical Breakthrough That Never Stopped Growing

In 1951, in a segregated hospital ward in Baltimore, a woman named Henrietta Lacks lay on a narrow bed, unaware that part of her body was about to outlive her. She was 31 years old. A mother of five. A tobacco farmer’s daughter. She had never heard the word “cell culture.” She did not consent to an experiment. And yet, from her body came the first human cells that would never die. A Patient, Not a Donor :contentReference[oaicite:0] went to Johns Hopkins Hospital for treatment of aggressive cervical cancer. At the time, Hopkins was one of the few hospitals that treated Black patients. During a routine biopsy, doctors removed small samples of her tumor. One sample was sent for diagnosis.…
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