Health & Wellness
According to the center's Chairman Dr. Ilya Barr, one of the first doctors in Israel to deal with egg donations from abroad, "The financial compensation the donors receive at about € 1,000 ($1,261) per cycle, makes it very tempting at a time where getting a job has become as difficult a mission in eastern European countries as in the rest of the world.
"It is not trauma but PTSD that is an independent predictor of subsequent suicide attempt," Dr. Holly C. Wilcox told Reuters Health.
Wilcox of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland and her colleagues examined the association between exposure to traumatic events -- with and without the development of PTSD -- and the risk of subsequent suicide attempt.

Chef Heston Blumenthal, whose restaurant, The Fat Duck, is at the centre of an investigation by health officals after 400 people fell ill
More than 1,000 people face medical checks after health officials widened their investigation into a mystery illness which has struck diners at one of Britain's best restaurants.
Hundreds more people have reported falling violently sick after eating the exquisitely complex dishes at the Fat Duck in Bray, Berkshire. In an extraordinary turn of events in the week-long enquiry, the Health Protection Agency (HPA) said the possible number of cases at Heston Blumenthal's world-renowned establishment was 400 - 10 times as many as was previously known.
Researchers at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Massachusetts removed a stumbling block in using so-called induced pluripotent stem cells, or iPS cells, by taking out potentially cancer-causing genes.
Writing in the journal Cell on Thursday, the scientists said they then turned these iPS cells into brain cells involved in Parkinson's disease.
Campaigners fighting the controversial plans, which were approved by health chiefs last week, say they have been inundated with calls from people saying they want to take action to stop fluoride being added to the water.
Most insist they will withhold their cash from Southern Water, which supplies the 200,000 affected residents in and around Southampton. But the company insists it has no say over fluoridation, and will take all action necessary to recover money from any one who refuses to pay.
The thousand inhabitants of Leifeng couldn't have lived in a more remote spot. The village, near the border with Siberia, is covered in a thick layer of snow during the winter. Not surprisingly, then, it is home to a small alcohol factory, which produces 'baijiu', the Chinese version of vodka. But the factory proved to be more of a curse than a blessing, as 14-year-old Zhang Guanghui explains:
But Ava was born with a genetic blend that will infuse her body with the explosive bursts of a power athlete and the steady engine of marathoner. Someday, this baby may blossom into a multisport, cross-training double threat. That's not parental conjecture. That's her DNA profile.
Her mom and dad had her tested.
Like more than 200 other parents to date, Hilary and Aaron Anderson paid $149 to Atlas Sports Genetics - a Boulder, Colo. company - for a sneak peek at their kid's athletic horizons.
The Andersons received a home-analysis kit to check whether Ava has the inborn knack for strength sports (like sprinting) or endurance sports (like cycling). Then, to get the genetic scoop, they simply brushed the inside of Ava's cheek with two cotton swabs, sealed the samples in a baggie and mailed them to an Australian lab used by Atlas. Although there are 20,000 strands of human DNA, the lab hunts for variations of just one: ACTN3, which can predict certain athletic skills, some experts believe. Five weeks later, the Andersons heard the verdict.
"She's a mix," said Hilary Anderson, who wasn't surprised by the results given that she is tall and lean and that her husband once trained for the U.S. Olympic weightlifting team. "If she came back all endurance, we'd probably focus more on the long-distance type things. Likewise, if she was all strength, we would direct her toward power sports. This will let her try all sorts of things."
The state is trying to shut down a New York City doctor's ambitious plan to treat uninsured patients for around $1,000 a year.
Dr. John Muney offers his patients everything from mammograms to mole removal at his AMG Medical Group clinics, which operate in all five boroughs.
"I'm trying to help uninsured people here," he said.
His patients agree to pay $79 a month for a year in return for unlimited office visits with a $10 co-pay.
But his plan landed him in the cross hairs of the state Insurance Department, which ordered him to drop his fixed-rate plan - which it claims is equivalent to an insurance policy.
"It seems that playing music can help you do all kinds of things better," says Nina Kraus from Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. "Musical experience sharpens your hearing not just for music, but for other sounds too."
Earlier studies suggested that musicians are especially good at identifying emotions expressed in speech, such as anger or sadness. But it wasn't clear what kind of brain activity makes the difference.
"Four deaths from bird flu have been confirmed in January and February," the head of Indonesia's National Committee for Bird Flu Control and Pandemic Preparedness, Bayu Krisnamurthi, was quoted as saying by Xinhua.






