tv Sri Lanka Deutsche Welle May 25, 2021 5:15am-6:01am CEST
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coming tokyo in the banks. this is dw news life from berlin up next october, 19th, special. and reminder. you can also find much more on a website that is d, w dot com for the lakes news analysis. i mean, the home expect what to use the site against the corolla virus pandemic. how has the rate of infection in developing? what does the latest research say information and contact the corona virus. the 19th special next on dw, sometimes a seed. it's all you need to allow big ideas to grow when bringing environmental conservation to life with learning,
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like global ideas. we will show you how climate change any environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing, download it now for me i w h o has labeled a subtype of that because it 19 virus 1st discovered in india as a variant of concern. it's a chilling phrase. the $16172.00 is thought to spread more easily. the subtype is responsible for the majority of new cases in parts of england. germany has banned old travelers from the u. k, except its own residents due to concerns about the strain. there is some good
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news. the vaccines from pfizer biotech and allister is in a thought to be highly effective against the variance after 2 doses and been presumed welcome. just when we could see light at the end of the tunnel and so much of the world was getting back sedated up pops and you variance that has scientists worried i asked epidemiologist eric 5 doing to give us the specifics on speed of infection. right, so in terms of transmission speed, be 1617 to the indian variant is spreading faster then not only will hon original street, but also the u. k. b 117 is about anywhere from 30 to 50 percent faster than the u. k. barrier. and about 2 times faster than the original. that means it is more contagious. it travels from person to person much faster. and this is
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a serious problem because what used to work in terms of mitigation will still work, but won't work as much. it is a tug of war in disgrace against different buyers and so mitigation used to slow down the virus may not be enough with a more, faster transmission bearing. can you also put it into context for me in fighting this pandemic where puts us is this, is this worrying for you? this is worry, definitely worrying because a faster transmitting a variance will be the one that spreads and spreads faster and 2 more countries. and now in the u. k, it's spreading so fast, it is now replacing the previously fast there, u k. previously, for the b will 17 took over the u. k over the winter time. and now is until recently 100 percent. but the indian very is so much faster. there is no even
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replacing the previous the facts are buried. and now it's now 50 percent overall, total cases in the u. k. 70 percent in already in some parts of the northwestern u. k. and these are not traveler case, these are community cases in the u. k. and now hospitals are surgeon, and pediatric infections are also searching wherever the scene the very goes. the speed here seems to be very telling a doctor i spoke to just last week. said that, cause it doesn't mutate as quickly as something like the flu and that she wasn't too concerned that efficacy of vaccines was going to become an issue. is it now becoming an issue? i think it is becoming issue public health in mind over the weekend put out on a risk assessment. they have updated risk assessment that not only transmission
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speed, they have greater confidence. it's faster, but vaccine efficacy, they say with one dose is only 33 percent with astrazeneca vaccine and 2 doses, it's only 60 percent. now, don't get me wrong. 60 percent is again symptomatic but illness and definitely good and much higher likely for severe moment. but that excludes a symptomatic and we know a symptomatic, it's oftentimes doesn't get much lower than symptomatic. so it's symptomatic efficacy. it's only 60 percent, 660 percent reduction compared to no vaccine. that is good enough full proof anymore. and that is a problem. granted 5 direct feel efficacy against be 16. 72 is a little bit higher. 88 percent with 2 doses, but only 50 percent one does. this is much lower than what we know against the
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other variance. and so with 60 percent asha danica advocacy, which is after that there's 2 thirds of all vaccines and the u. k. and large majority of the vaccines in india, and as well as the world, we know that it is not for proof for slowing down the virus entirely is 60 percent. okay, luckily there are 5 will be and thank you very much for joining us today. thank you . well, the officials in the u. k. are in a rush to fully vaccinated population due to the various b w's, charlotte chelsea pill reports as bolton tooth. britain weights. such machinations are on the way in this northern english town to combat the rapid rising cases. if the coven 19 variant best identified in india. it's already the dominant strain here, and is likely to become dominant nation wide. what we've noticed is with our
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inflection rates in bolton, the transmission has been happening in the younger age groups. i've been putting a lot of pressure on since the government, especially to make sure that we can rely the vaccination as quickly as possible. and essentially what i've been saying in recent days and we have to box and a whole also before the end of may, this is a delicate moment in the u. k. fight against the 19 well, thousands have been vaccinated here in the last few days alone. these measures are unlikely to contain the spread with the same variance already detected in dozens of areas in england. u. k. had a successful vaccination campaign so far from 70 percent of adults have had at least one dose. but that still leaves a considerable number, who are unvaccinated, no authorities here are wanting is among that population. this strain could spread like wildfire. this variance is considered more transmissible than the u. k. is
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dominant, can't strain. what is it known is by how much a significant increase could see hospitalization surge. but there is reasons the hope in both and the majority of those in hospital haven't been vaccinated despite being eligible. assign vaccines, a working information that we've seen, that jayceon suggests that our current vaccines do confer immunity. again, stephen, this new variance, we are picking up novel virus infections, but we're not seeing severe disease emerging in a fearful way. so, so i think it's quite likely that over be able to vaccination with this one as some remain cautious. others are enjoying you, found treating, socializing and doors returned across the country this week with all restrictions due to be listed in just over a month now. but the government says the next few days will be key. dates are wrong
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case numbers and trans miss ability will help determine whether england continues down it's passed to freedom. open the brakes on its road maps. out of locked down to our science correspondence, derek williams with your questions on the corona virus. this time, the question about variance from a different perspective call, sir, as could be to virus inevitably continues to mutate, could also mutate to become less deadly. this is complicated, but here again, the short answer is yes, that could happen and we hope it will. but there is no guarantee scientist used to believe that pathogens always evolved to grow less deadly because it was thought a deadly disease is an effective disease. the reasoning was that if a pathogen kills its host, especially if it kills that host quickly,
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then it lowers its own chances of being passed on so less deadly, more transmissible variance should have an evolutionary advantage, right? well, the problem with that logic is that virulence can also be viewed as an advantage because the thick of the host grows, the more likely they are to give their pathogen to someone else since they're shutting more of it. so we actually think there's kind of a, an evolutionary tradeoff between trans miss ability and virulence. and there are certainly pathogens, for instance, the tuberculosis bacteria that had been infecting humans for thousands of years, yet still kill large numbers of people to see what the future might hold for october 19. therefore, scientists have been looking at the other corona viruses known to infect humans, in particular the for that we think have been doing it for quite
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a while. they only cause mild cold like symptoms. interestingly, that might have less to do with them and more to do with us, especially with our children. one theory is that repeated exposure to those other corona viruses and early childhood might be helping to prevent more severe cases of the thicknesses they could cause later in life. the 1st go to does become an endemic background illness in our society. then, then later generations of children will be exposed to it early at an age when it rarely makes you seriously ill. and that in turn, should make subsequent exposures much less dangerous, or at least that's the hope. me. now, when life gives you lemons, make some lemonade, or in times of covert if life gives you a pandemic,
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tried to have some fun with it. hungary on for printer has turned the hunt for a vaccine to video game. did you include the indian mutant? yes, they are the red ones. so the yellow one is the norma virus. so escaping the virus with the swipe of a finger, it can be so easy, at least in this smartphone app. the goal of the game is to collect vaccines. you will have a little man wearing a mask, and the main task is to avoid the viruses. of course, their normal viruses and their other mutant ones, which of course are much worse. i think that the free game is supposed to bring in big business for griff collections, hungary and fastened retailer. when his stores had to close fulton suit, i had to focus on online sales. but how to learn people to the website. his kids took up the challenge with a game that nets players points convertible into real money discounts for the
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brands close. it's unclear when business in stores will pick up again until then, the suitors keep playing, hoping that everyone catches the vaccine soon. thanks for watching. stay safe and see you again soon. ah ah, the booming business of infertility, argosy, an ag donation, a bit in germany. but elsewhere in europe, they are legal, the german capital, and that will driven travels european countries. well, the nice industry your waste them. clues on dw eco india in new delhi environmental
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activists that are fighting for and the cities concrete, jumbo, when it should turn off, get burned in the heat. the number of trees in the indian capital has shrunk dramatically. nature, conservationists want to change that. they count and catalogue the trees and to protect them equal india. in 60 minutes on dw the news. to me speaking, an expedition me look into this for the secret language of wales, the exciting part of underwater listening. if you're getting your window into their,
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their life that you have never, you would never see a company or research came to the pacific to include language of whales to forth on d, w. one in 6 couples in germany, find they're unable to have children. it was the worst thing i could have imagined . i thought that i might never have a child. i think we should judge people. options such as far as c o using donor eggs are illegal in germany. so when all else fails, many couple seek help abroad. it's a huge had to everything has been criminalized in germany. but elsewhere it's
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become a multi $1000000000.00 industry. as you meet, the people who do these things aren't criminal. these are just procedures that help people fulfilled our dream of having children only and keep them safe when that many of the sour goodson jonas are acting out of financial need me. i meant that, but i mean, i mean $900.00 euro that's nearly twice but a n and a month. gotcha. we do nation and sorry to see lucrative business in europe. what cost francisco fab. i always wanted children, but it just never works. like so many, she exhausted all the legal options, the reproductive medicine in germany. the whole man treatment was tied to blackouts and injure herself. but even that didn't deter her. this is and if washed alone
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from, i'm leaving the, the thought of not having children was so horrific to me that no matter what back i suffered, slapped, i'd pick myself up, hop, reactivate my hope and try the next thing. and so gradually we widen the limits that we were pro, go to oscar, and said we'd try again. being with donated eggs she could have probably got pregnant in germany. it's illegal. she could have got the treatment abroad and faced no legal consequences, but her conscience wouldn't let her do it. about the need. every one who doesn't get pregnant in the normal way, so to speak. suddenly faces ethical question. and in the end, you have to be able to look at yourself in the mirror and live with your decision best mon fish and speaking in the shawn can much is possible medically, but remains ethically controversial. egg donation is legal in many western countries and a handful of countries and l surrogacy to in germany,
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only the standard fertility treatments are allowed. heavy but can finish heads up of fertility treatment center. one of more than $130.00 in germany. it's been more than 40 years since the birth of the 1st test tube baby, as the procedure was initially dubbed medicine has come a long way since then. in vitro fertilization is now standard 110000 ivy f cycles are performed in germany alone. each year, germany also allow sperm donation and passed additional legislation in 2018. but a donation is not allowed. that involves taking the egg of another woman during i v f treatment. the embryo was then transferred to the prospective mother. surrogacy is also banned here. another woman is artificially inseminated and carries the baby to turn on behalf of the parents. the embryos stems from the sperm and egg of the
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prospective parents ordonez. 2 years ago, germany strengths, and it's a donation. those, the legal constraints placed on these procedures have been hotly contested for years. germany's national academy of sciences has long criticized the restrictions which are based on a law dating back to 1991. there's most of them enough for all desire to spring up and say, i have a 38 year old female patient who is no longer producing eggs. there's a medical side to the case and a psychological and emotional one. i have to tell her that even with only she probably won't get pregnant using a donor, it would be an option for her, but i can't advise her on that. otherwise the state prosecutor will come knocking on like, on death is felicia. he says, every year, thousands of women seek help abroad for a handful of countries. it's become a lucrative industry. the vice president is all in the worst cases of the all inclusive packages. and it's like we're going on
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a nice holiday and we'll get pregnant in the process. or maybe not. its mixed with commercial interest. romance and trade fence have even sprung up in germany like this one. and now skid, before the pandemic found due to a legal loophole clinics from abroad, can advertise fertility services here. the to actually illegal in germany were not allowed to film during the opening hours in order to protect the privacy of members of the public attending the fat. there are also clinics here advertising start to see the number one choice for those that can afford it. of the american clinic slab prices, the surrogacy started 230000 euros. those that the smaller budget can opt for a ukrainian clinic where the baby package costs 64000 euros. some even guarantee a baby. one clinic made headlines last year when around
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a 100 newborns were stranded in kiev because look down measures prevented parents from connecting them. the images that were published by the clinic to increase the pressure on the government were beamed around the world. shortly afterwards, parents from abroad were able to collect the infants. the case triggered an international debate on the ethics of surrogacy the practices legal in some european countries to including the u. k, austria and denmark. but only if it's actually stick and not driven by money. greece goes a step further and allows clinics to offer surrogacy to international clients. selena and her husband decided to seek help in greece. we've changed her name. she wishes to remain anonymous because of the social stigma involved. she says even her friends have criticized her. obviously you can't question the morality of it
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something it's abusing another woman's body. but for me that i might never have a child was the worst thing i could have imagined. i think we shouldn't judge people many struggle with the decision to use the sarah good because of ethical questions and the cost involved the us or canada would have been our 1st choice. they felt like the safest options, but we just couldn't afford it. then there was ukraine, which would have been the cheapest, but we didn't have a good feeling about it. so greece was the middle path. it was affordable and we felt that it was legally well regulated, and the surrogates were well cared for laner and her husband who actually halfway through the procedure, when lena suddenly got pregnant naturally. back to the trade fair. i've arranged to
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meet with a doctor from a clinic in greece. he's helped a number of german couples, have a baby through surrogacy. so what motivates the salary? good, mother, she goes through a pregnancy for a couple. she's never met. my basket, he's a movie. you shouldn't underestimate people's desire to help others as a doctor working in this area as a way, i always tried to understand why a woman would decide to do the dentist. and over the years, i've noticed that the desire to help other couples is a very powerful motivation. and in my positive, for instance, the her. okay, i bet assistance. okay. but another incentive for the salary good is the financial compensation that they get from. this is looking to be honest, i would disagree, minus my experience has shown that money doesn't play a major role in these cases in these, i guess it's a kind of goes on the streets. okay. that you talked about compensation, 10000 euro. that's legally fixed. real money in greece.
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nice us, i left town. i don't think that all women would undergo this procedure. it's not about the money. okay. okay. but isn't it the case that a business model has developed and figured because there's money involved and i'm scared. you know, as a doctor who's been involved in reproductive medicine for more than 20 years, i can assure you that it is not a form of business feelings homeless. and again, it's a form of medical care and help you. so that makes people happy, has to be in the low tech, locally, but is it really just about making others happy? i decide to head to greece to find out for myself. every year, some $200.00 babies are born in greece to, sorry, goods. the law permits the practice as long as it's actually stick back during the national economic crisis started in 2009 greece began promoting medical tourism to generate income. in 2013 athens open surrogacy to international patients.
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since then, childless couples have come from all over the world, but there appears to be no independent checks into the welfare of the salary, gets my contacts on the ground, can't even put me in touch with any experts in this area, which i can speak to someone who wants to be a sorry, good? she asked not to be filmed. a clinic has told her she can sign up for her to see what her youngest child is a little older. she's a single parent with 3 children, but emphasizes repeatedly that her motivation is merely to help. she dismisses all talk of possible health risks. oh my god sees us. and when you're doing something good, maybe the next day, those good things will return to you. she has no job. the family of 4 lives from child benefits, 280 years a month and all surrogates are allowed to receive 10000 euros in compensation. but
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she tells us the thumbs involved much higher. she's been told 30000 and that's a that's a good started life. 30000 euros. $30000.00 heroes would be a loss of money. a powerful incentive. i joined forces with another generalist in flight. the greek tide and discreet, where we're going to poses a couple in the mid to late forty's, who are desperate to have children. greece offers parents that use surrogacy an advantage. a court process guarantees them the parental rights before the pregnancy begins. we inquire with facility clinic and get an appointment right away, but obviously we can't take a camera and adult 2 inches assistant told us that couples from all over the world managed to have babies here, evidently for loss of money. the cost for us would be between 788-5000
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euros of which 222-5002 go to the salary good. and he says, we shouldn't try to develop any emotional bond with the surrogate. and she was mainly doing it for the money because it was incredible. he said right away, she was doing it the money. she gets up to a 1000 euros a month. and now to get done, but then another 121-5000 euros. when the baby is delivered, a violent yes doctor and the assistant said, sarah good gets another 10 to 15000 years at 1st. it doesn't sound that tell touristic of michigan. i reposed our experiences to someone from the body responsible for drawing up greek floor in this area. catch us enough on to ducky is the vice president of the national authority of assisted reproduction. i tell her that we've heard from multiple sources that, sorry, gets the motivated by the money and may receive 20 or even 30000 euros.
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is a totally legal because the thought that amount of funding she could receive is $10000.00 . okay. what they're selling, plenty 1000 is amazing. plan 1000 is the payment and the payment would be against morality would be against human dignity that could not be allowed to be an availability of the human body. i tell her this is perspective parents we were supposed to pay up to 85000 heroes. 80. yes. 80. 858-5000. yes. i mean, i learn things from you. this is not possible. this is, this is an extra extraordinary amount. i've never heard. so i'm really, i'm very sorry. they read foreigners like that because we didn't mean that when we
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said that liquid open, the grid clinics for we go back to tourism. we didn't mean that we should, they should explode. people care to the newfound to darky promises to have the case followed up. some clinics have clearly turned surrogacy into a business. but what about the practice of egg donation? that's much cheaper than surrogacy. every year, several 1000 couples from germany go abroad to use donor eggs. the number one destination in europe. so this service is spain. here too. it's supposed to be out sick. can x across the country use thousands of dona eggs in fertility treatments every year, and the trend is increasing. but what does it involve for the donors and who profits? i visit a fertility clinics. it's very popular on german forums. a doctor from austria is responsible for german speaking patients. right?
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yes, i have 3 initial contact meetings, a day of those around 80 percent up to receive donor eggs. so over the entire year it adds up. under spanish law, the dentist has to remain anonymous. so i can't meet any of the women who come here . a member of staff explains the medical procedure. one of what it says, this is the operating room where both the patients and the donors have the treatment. and the donor is injected with hormones, said that she produces multiple eggs instead of just one. these then harvested in an operation the relatively safe. it's not complete the risk free. and in rare cases, that can be serious complications resulting in injury to in our organs or subsequent infertility. the groups at the clinic is part of the claims to have one of the largest banks in the world. they began storing dona eggs and patient embryos. 30 years ago. i ask how many they have when she's in the lot.
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i can't tell you exactly how many we have right now. but we can store more than 60000 embryos at any one time. and we can keep them for many years. yeah. so where do all the eggs come from? yak of doubling us says egg donation is a part of the culture in spain. i see here come by the school when i arrived here, that was one of the 1st things that surprised me. there really is this idea of altruism egg donation. in the same way people in germany, austria donate blood. the financial aspect is there to, of course, the donor receives between 100-1500 euros. depending on how many eggs we get. so it's not that much. and but if a student from the university of valencia does it to treat herself to a weekend in a beater, i personally don't have any problem with that. and it's still
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a 1000 heroes is a lot of money for many people. and presumably, it's rarely used to finance a short break. the average young woman in spain lives on a lot less than 1000 years a month. in fact, nearly 40 percent of young people are unemployed. surely many women feel compelled to give eggs for the money. naturally, the clinics won't pass on the details of any dentist, and it's not a subjects that women in spain talk about openly. but eventually i managed to find someone prepared to talk publicly for the 1st time and on camera about her experience of donating eggs. 5 years ago, 30 year old aliya was a student and didn't have enough to live on. like so many her age, she couldn't find a decent job. she donated egg 6 times in all 900 heroes each time you call me back. then i had a job with very few hours. so my only secure income was $200.00 euros, among which on the from that i needed to pay both my rent and my fee i gave. we are
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the 1st time i donated everything, i can remember getting paid. and the 1st thing i did when i got home was to pay my rent for the next 3 months. by all of my years, fif, ellia knew what to say to be accepted as a don't. you don't get me, don't let me. they went to the man, they looked at me and asked, so what's your motivation for doing this by you by and i said, oh, my motivation is altruistic. so i just want to help people and that was in just a moment. and i honestly thought of either him a very good actress or a sociopath or i didn't know what he's or he's a very bad psychologist. i mean, just look at me and all the people who go there lie to him and he just accepted me and then i got out yesterday for years now, egg donation in spain has been on the rise. one of the few critical voices scientist, consuela, as plaza. she studied the practice,
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both in spain and internationally. i believe's the reason for the increase here is purely financial. she says the clinics have become very skilled in advertising. yes . can you can, you can see that on the one hand, the clinic director, advertising at women who need financial help, who lack of money. then on the other, they highlight the outro istic side, the idea that those who respond are helping others. they also offer a comprehensive gynecological checkup so that in the end they can say the donation wasn't purely for financial reasons. and even though those reasons are obviously there, without that, no one would undergo hormone treatment and take the risk that is clearly involvement or raising work. on the one hand, there are women in financial needs on the other couples desperately wanting children. so sit night for couples visiting the clinics. once again, we poses
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a couple wanting children and immediately gets appointments into clinics. once again, we are unable to film those clinics. assure us that with this method will be able to have children, the health risks for the donors and for me as the mother of play down. we're also encouraged to have a dna test done to rule out any hereditary illnesses. one of the clinics is even running a special offer yet, and she said says how much it's supposed to cost and then crossed it. hourly. but we'll offer you yeah. hilarious. a special deal for you is 7 and a half 1000. but only if you do it this month, then the dna test is free. that come one day later and it'll be $3000.00 euros. what would jim and doctors say about the price of only sheila and is positive to working group some reproductive medicine that are linked to the german
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medical association. he says the price isn't that high, but he feels special offers and unnecessary extra like the dna test suggest the money making outfit. that his view is kind of the either medicine is not just a product that you sell the label. of course we live from our income and it's not unusual to have bad practices here and there wasn't one, but the focus for me is always the patient and not my wallet on the didn't. but that's not the impression i get from what you're saying. the other aspect is the risks to the donor and to myself were play down dongle me was all clear. when this was close i'm it needs to be an informed decision. it's both sides need to be clear about it. it's a low risk procedure, but not risk free job, and that needs to be clear in the, in the design. and the donor is not even having the eggs harvested to fulfill her own dream of a family. but for others that gives you more of the stone. so there's a certain moral obligation to think about the welfare of the woman who donated her
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eggs and spend the physical risks of the one aspect. but what about the emotional side do? don't is experience long term after effects. the news is another form i don't know, willing to go public 10 years ago. she donated eggs repeatedly and now feels cheated by the clinic. she says no one explain to her the risks involved. she tells me her body reacted so badly to all the woman's that her life was in danger. with the progress in medicine since then that wouldn't happen today, but she'll never donate again on that. but i honestly donated because i thought it couldn't be a bad thing model, but i thought i was doing something good for another woman. yes, that was someone who couldn't get pregnant, would receive for me and it's anatomy. how my portfolio and he's going to and i would benefit financially and i needed the money back that and then,
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but afterwards i thought about it and a lot and i don't see it that way anymore. so you know, may not be 10 years old. noosa is still struggling. she tried hard to suppress her biological children. when i mean, i guess a part of me tries to believe that nothing happened. i just can't imagine it normally. my. i prefer to say that my work and weren't personalized. i mean more than the yeah, but now when i start to talk about all these bad feelings, come up my mom and just not ready for it. but if it's easier to think that nothing has to be okay that my eggs didn't develop fully. and there are no children out there with my dna here. call me him and i'll sing on. part of your own identity is clearly more than
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a quick operation. spanish socio logistics kind of went fullness has studied the practice of egg donation in europe. she's critical of the spanish system saying, well, childless couples benefit and the clinic, them well to the loses the donors. these in between situation is just not really working for the women that actually hurt their reproductive capacity. because neither they're part of altruism very clear because they are, they are forbidden to have any relation with the family. and at the same time, they are not paid. what it costs and they are not having to write, so it's a very high pocket situation. she believes society needs to decide either a donation is altruistic or paid properly. if the society either jeremy societies, banish the type of european society, we decide that we don't mind commercialize in reproductive capacity. then
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we need to find proper framework in which to do that with the right of the people who are actually willing to contribute with their ex are with their reproductive capacity and to have good income to do that. so she's calling for a clear decision on whether it's an act of kindness or a surface. but opinions differ based on egg donation and surrogacy. the debate in germany has been going on for years. the national academy of sciences, which can finish the part of once egg donation to be legalized, not falling on donations, have been carried out for more than 30 years. now. these days, the band is hard to justify legally ethically, all medically i regret that it can't be carried out in germany in an orderly way.
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it could be well regulated, so that couples are advised properly the don't is their advice properly. and that only a limited amount of money is given, don't spend all but others disagree. political scientists, catherine, belongs to a network of scientists. that activity opposes any legalization of ag donation or star gassy. she says the altruism argument is unrealistic and there aren't enough women who would donate voluntarily does i'm $512.00 i'm that means a certain level of compensation will be needed done on the amount of the and then we still won't have enough. so the compensation will be increased and before you know, you have a line of business where women are risking their health before the benefits of others. i, again, i'm a donation and so i guess the unethical or perfectly acceptable is legalization loan neva gene. what a government's doing to clarify these questions. the german justice ministry
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referred me to the health ministry, which in turn points to a memorandum written by the german medical association. it says, there are complex legal, ethical, and societal aspects to consider. the current governing coalition agreement foresees neither the drafting of a new law on reproductive medicine, nor any modification to the existing embryo protection act. so the government doesn't have the issue on its agenda, and neither is it triggering any new debate on those complex legal, ethical, and societal aspects. those affected will have to wait francisco fab, i never had a child. instead, she's devoted her life to advising. other couples wanting children, and calling for germany to finally make a decision on the donation and salary. gassy. she says this silence surrounding these issues and the ignorance of many politicians is a disaster. with harness and shame on his hon. we're too afraid to broach the
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subject because we get rounded by saying it's banned in germany. please go abroad and we abandon tens of thousands to a situation where there's no proper legal framework support and no advice on it because that's not love. we just abandon people and then wonder why there's a problem also based on, sorry to see and a donation, medical experts in the you took a loss about altruism, but often the sour goodson don't as just have financial needs, potential problems, bass, physical and emotional frequently go unmentioned. meanwhile, those wanting children face a dilemma with no where to turn to objective advice. clarity is needed and rules that are fair for all the the india
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in new delhi environmental activists are fighting for each tree and the city concrete jungle. when the man who turned off get burned in the heat, the number of trees in the indian capital has shrunk dramatically. nature, conservationists want to change that, they count and catalog, patrice to protect them. eco, india. in 30 minutes on d. w. i chemical. my last from the 1st world war are being clear here. this is quite where in germany, most were toxins lie dormant in the soil, contaminating the ground water. politicians are letting the grass grow over the phone. but that isn't enough. chemical weapons in germany in 75 minutes on d w. so you want to know what makes the janice teen just in the gym. i love
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