Nurses are always considered helpers and the profession is widely regarded as one for compassionate and helping individuals. The Nursing’s Social Policy Statement is a work that seeks to detail the many ways in which nurses can assist others. How nurses relate with the society is through a relationship. A relationship that is sort of a social contract complete with expectations from both sides. The relationship allows nurses to carry out their professional duties in the provision of care to individual clients and to the society. It also empowers nursing practitioners to engage in policymaking, legislative and political action for the purposes of improving the provision of care, improving nursing practice, improving nursing research, and improving nursing education. It also enables nurses to comprehend the concepts of justice and social ethics and the roles they play in individual and societal health (Fowler, 2015). This work discusses the nursing social contract with regards to Henrietta Lack’s story as detailed in Rebecca Skloot’s The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (Skloot, 2010).
Henrietta Lacks was a poor, undereducated, African American woman living in Baltimore in the 1940s. She was married and had five children with her husband who is named David. For quite some time, she was living with abdominal pain that she could not explain. In 1950, she decided enough was enough and asked her husband to take her to the Johns Hopkins Hospital. It was the only regional health facility where black people could get treatment for complicated conditions back then (Skloot, 2010).
After undergoing tests at the hospital, she was found to have cervical cancer. This was in the second month of 1951. She subsequently received radiation treatment under general anesthesia. Cervical radiation treatment was the gold standard intervention back then for the disease. Continuing research at the hospital by two physicians, George Gey and Richard TeLinde, plays an important role in Henrietta Lacks’ story. Gey was trying to develop and grow immortal cell lines in the lab for research, while TeLinde was a renowned cervical cancer doctor who at the time was investigating how cervical cancer types are related (Skloot, 2010; Stump, 2014).
Just 21 days into utilizing Lacks’ cells for research, Gey made a breakthrough in his research. Lacks’ cells were...
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