The art of Kevin Blythe Sampson

THE ART OF
KEVIN BLYTHE SAMPSON

2/2/10

Second Opinion - Use of a Woman’s Cells Raises Ethical Questions - NYTimes.com

Fifty years after Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer in the “colored” ward at Johns Hopkins Hospital, her daughter finally got a chance to see the legacy she had unknowingly left to science. A researcher in a lab at Hopkins swung open a freezer door and showed the daughter, Deborah Lacks-Pullum, thousands of vials, each holding millions of cells descended from a bit of tissue that doctors had snipped from her mother’s cervix.

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