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RE: Circumcision - 7/10/2008 2:45:01 PM   
Rule


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Darcyandthedark
I would be interested, if you, with your experience of evolutionary theory, be able to respond to my question as to why - if circumcision is a positive move for HIV - why it isn't dropping in the states but remaining stagnant, with small rises (no one has attempted to inform me yet, particularly the person who seemed to promote it the most).  Unfortunately the most recent results will not be available until this november, so I am based on 2007 and before.

It is a very good, perceptive question. I have noticed that none of the mutilation proponents have answered your question, though you have posed that question several times now.
 
Your argument implies that penis mutilation does not protect against hiv infection. I suspect that that is not correct, though. According to evidence and my hypothesis it ought to protect people against especially bacterial infections, but apparently also against viral infections. Can it perhaps be that many of the infections in the USA are transmitted by hypodermic needles? (Hm, not likely.) Perhaps then an environmental factor, like lubricants? You do pose an interesting problem, especially since I am not able to solve it within a couple of minutes. Well done!

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RE: Circumcision - 7/10/2008 3:22:23 PM   
SageFemmexx


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Most of the families in my practice never circumsize their babies. But they tend to buck the status quo on anything society expects. There was a huge shift a few years ago towards noncircumcision when insurance companies started refusing to pay for it as a routine proceedure. It's amazing how many foreskins were saved when the family had to come up with a couple of hundred dollars on their own to have lil Johnny snipped.

BTW--I always point out to procircumsion people that in other countries, it is the girls that are circed and their clits removed by the village midwife with a piece of glass. That too is considered a societal norm.

My position on the topic is let the kid decide for himself. It is his equipment and.....babies do feel plenty of pain while adults are given meds for the "discomfort".

Be Well,

Sage

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RE: Circumcision - 7/10/2008 4:13:32 PM   
Caius


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I was really hoping to not get further mired in this debate, but I have to ask why you think your resources are superior to somethndif's in terms of "scientific evaluation" when only one of them comes from a peer-reviewed source and that one is clearly an editorial that stakes its claim on the ethical issue of self-determination and not original research. Somethndif, by comparison, has only quoted from leading global insititutions in the monitoring and prevention of disease, as far as I've noticed.  Seems like firmer empirical ground to me....

More important than that though, how do you equate the removal of some limited superficial tissue from the around the glans of the penis of an infant resulting in no proven inhibition of function  to the carving out of the clitoris and/or labia  in a girl of (typically) eight years of age which generally results in massive loss of sexual sensation that is obviously not in doubt to anyone (including those who perform it), which causes lifelong complications to reproductive health, and which involves tremendously more pain, blood loss, and systemic shock?  This is exactly the kind of misappropriation of the word 'mutilation' I was speaking of earlier.  Not only is the physiological distinction one of drastically different proportions, the underlying intent is much less concerned with the girl's well-being than the subduing of her libido, in most cases, to say nothing of the differential psychological trauma inherent between the scenario wherein an infant has a small bit of tissue removed that he will never remember having and the one where a girl is held down while huge portions (if not the entirety) of her external genitalia is removed with crude instruments and typically without the benefit of anesthesia and then sometimes sewn shut for good measure?  Try to bear in mind we're not just talking about differences in gross amounts of tissue here, but also the nature and significance of the organ removed.  The penis and the clitoris are roughly analogous in terms of sexual stimulation (they actually form from the same undifferentiated fetal precursor) both having a roughly equivalent proportion of afferent tactile neurons involved in sexual stimulation. In order to translate the effect of sexual limitation of a clitorecdomy to a man, you'd have to at least completely remove the head of the penis.  I daresay both circumcised and uncircumcised men would see a rather big distinction between the removal of the prepuce and the removal of the entire glans.   Female 'circumcision' (and what a misnomer that is) also commonly leads to drastically (upwards of 60% for complete genital cutting) increased risk of death to both mother and child during delivery.  Even if the entirety of the utterly unsubstantiated claims of harm from male circumcision were true, they wouldn't amount to a fraction as much harm as that implicit in this one effect from female genital cutting.  I generally prefer to avoid being too strident in my responses to these kinds of issues, but I think you need some lessons in basic anatomy to gain some perspective here.  Genital mutilation is about as much a man's issue as abortion is; when men start losing upwards of 50% of their penises, then it will become an issue of equal relevance for men and women. Until then, the suggestion that male and female gential modification practices are comporable phenomena representing a similar kind of assault is just outright offensive. 

< Message edited by Caius -- 7/10/2008 5:06:18 PM >

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RE: Circumcision - 7/11/2008 5:51:59 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Caius


More important than that though, how do you equate the removal of some limited superficial tissue from the around the glans of the penis of an infant resulting in no proven inhibition of function  to the carving out of the clitoris and/or labia  in a girl of (typically) eight years of age which generally results in massive loss of sexual sensation that is obviously not in doubt to anyone (including those who perform it), which causes lifelong complications to reproductive health, and which involves tremendously more pain, blood loss, and systemic shock?  This is exactly the kind of misappropriation of the word 'mutilation' I was speaking of earlier. 



The foreskin is not superficial skin, it is a fully functioning part of the male genitalia. It is there to protect the glans and stop the glans cauterizing. The origins of circumcision are in irrational religious beliefs and the use of suprious medical evidence to defend it has only come late in the day when people have started to attack the practice as a primitive, needless and irrational mutilation and abuse of the male child. In this case, mutilation is mot misappropriated, it is exactly what it is, just because it is mainstream in America, doesn't make it an acceptable practice. You should be asking tyourself as to why America is the only developed country where circumcision is mainstream. You should be asking yourself why America medical professionals are the only ones in the world that recommend circumcision as routine. Is this really another case of America is right and the rest of the world is wrong?

Of course female cicumcision is about loss of senstation, so is male ciscumcision, the bible quite clearly states that as the reason for the practice. I reiterate, circumcision is practiced not because of medical benefits (real or no) but because of irrational and barbaric religious practices.

< Message edited by meatcleaver -- 7/11/2008 5:54:28 AM >


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RE: Circumcision - 7/11/2008 6:04:34 AM   
RCdc


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Thank you for taking the time to respond Caius.  Whilst I totally agree that stablization is a 'victory' we are still nowhere near the lower end of infection rates and that to me, is concerning.
 
I don't dismiss circumcision and HIV as a total waste of time, but I do believe it is important to note, that although the stats on HIV and Africa has people putting on their thinking caps and even using the statistics in threads like these, that the infection rates for women(and by that, in children) in Africa is rising, regardless of who is circumcised or not and this is one of the big reasons why many health organisations, particularly world ones, are apprehensive to support the circumcision claim to the extenet that they promote it.
 
the.dark.

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RE: Circumcision - 7/11/2008 11:08:07 PM   
Caius


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
The foreskin is not superficial skin, it is a fully functioning part of the male genitalia. It is there to protect the glans and stop the glans cauterizing.


LMAO, Cauterizing? Ahhh, right. Because the head of the circumcised penis has been known to regularly dry out, rub raw, and in some cases just fall right off, huh?  Trust me, the glans does just fine without its little hoodie.  Which makes sense as physiologists and evolutionary biologists long ago largely abandoned the idea the function of the prepuce in most of those mammals that have it is to protect the glans.  I'm not sure where you're getting your information, but it's not from anything written in the last few decades; currently researchers believe one of two possibilities are likely -- that the the foreskin helps protect the developing penis in utero or that it is simply part of our phylogenetic inheritance and is in fact a vestigial organ.

If nothing else, there's no doubt (anywhere in research or the medical profession) that the foreskin contributes significantly to local infection and a variety of painful skin conditions of the penis (balanitis, phimosis, paraphimosis, ischaemia, and others).

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
The origins of circumcision are in irrational religious beliefs and the use...


Oh, I don't disagree there.  The origins of circumcision are in fact largely religion and tradition and we simply fell ass-backwards into any benefits, to whatever extent they exist.

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
...suprious medical evidence to defend it has only come late in the day...


Spurious? The World Health Organization launched a comprehensive review of all literature on the subject a few years back.   Their conclusions were
that is now established fact that circumcision significantly reduces chances of contraction of HIV.  Perhaps a little information in the basic pathophysiological mechanisms of HIV contraction in heterosexuals will help elaborate on this point.  The cell which is currently held to be the primary site of introduction of HIV for males is called a Langerhan's cell.  These cells are found in various human mucosa in both sexes and, in the male, throughout the epithelium of the penis, but, and here's the important part, they are found to be most prevalent and most superficial (that is, closer the surface of the skin) in the inner surface of the foreskin, due to lower levels of keratin in the surrounding tissue.  Studies tracking massive populations found an undeniably lower rate of contraction in circumcised men.  The three largest of these studies were concluded early because the international teams running them found the evidence to be so overwhelming that they considered it an ethical dilemma to continue tracking these two groups without recommending circumcision to the uncircumcized who participated.  Similar reviews have since also established similar correlations for HPV, and evidence is building for a number of other STDs.  That rates for penile cancer are three times higher for uncircumcised men has been known for almost three decades.  Read up, unless you consider yourself a greater authority than the WHO despite having, (as best I can tell) no background in medicine or physiology. And when I say read-up, I don't mean  thed editorial section of the BBC webpage.  

However, let me state again for the record, as you seem to have missed it, that I am not advocating for the practice of circumcision for the purpose of disease prevention;  the prevention of AIDS and other pandemics of sexually-transmitted diseases is best affected by education and the dissemination of condoms; circumcision, even if to does cut contraction rates by a considerable amount, is not the epidemiological solution as the spread of the disease will still continue to accelerate. Nor am I really advocating for circumcision at all -- my purpose in this post, as in my previous two, is to correct medical misinformation I've seen forwarded here as fact.

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
In this case, mutilation is mot misappropriated, it is exactly what it is, just because it is mainstream in America, doesn't make it an acceptable practice. You should be asking tyourself as to why America is the only developed country where circumcision is mainstream. You should be asking yourself why America medical professionals are the only ones in the world that recommend circumcision as routine. Is this really another case of America is right and the rest of the world is wrong?


Almost 1/3 of all men in the world are circumcised, some 1.1 billion persons.  There are some 150 million men in the U.S., less than 80% of them circumcised. Do the math.  Circumcision is practiced by a significant portion of the population of every continent in the world and is not an American-dominated custom on the industrial world.   It is, in fact, the most common surgical procedure in existence.

More important than that, however, much as you've tried to frame the debate in the medical profession as one in which only American doctors support the practice, this is just out and out false.  The studies I alluded to above were mostly published by non-American or international groups and were conducted throughout the world. To the extent that there is any particularly relevant regions concentrated on they are to be found in Africa and Asia.   You can find medical advocates for the procedure anywhere you go;  of course, what you will find most commonly in the medical community of pretty much any nation is neither advocates or proponents, but rather those who hold that it is a generally harmless procedure, be it cosmetic or practical, and that the debate is, to the knowledgeable practitioner, a non-issue.  Even amongst those who are opposed to it as a routine procedure, only the smallest fraction view it as rising anywhere near the level of "mutilation." Of course, this is rapidly changing throughout Africa where it is becoming much more widely advised by physicians and institutions battling the spread of HIV.   And they are damn well entitled to in that context, without being cast as promoters of barbarous ritual.  Have you ever seen, with your own eyes, children stricken with AIDS? I have, and trust me, it presents a considerably more painful image than a circumcision. 

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
Of course female cicumcision is about loss of senstation, so is male ciscumcision...


If the circumcised penis were any more sensitive, men would never have sex with any woman more than once as the walrus-like wail that issued forth from their mouths during any intimate act in which their member was involved would surely scare their lovers lesbian. 

Are you even serious at this point? This is a complete old wive's tale that has been throughly debunked.  As a matter of fact, for many years it was contended that the opposite was true, that circumcision actually increased sensitivity, and to this day more research supports this position than the former, though I personally doubt there is much of an effect at all, as does most of the scientific and medical community.  But you don't even need to trust us.  Go ask any circumcised man in good reproductive health if they feel their penis fails to deliver enough sensation to make sexual interaction pleasurable and gratifying.  They will laugh in your face, and rightly so.  I've never heard of a single circumcised man who feels that he was mutilated by the procedure.  And not because of inherited guilt as you've tried to imply with circumcised men here who have also pointed this out, but because it has not affected their chances at happiness in any sense.   I'm not saying that there aren't some men out there who do in fact feel this way, but I'd be surprised if they represent even so much as .00001% of the entirety of those 1.1 billion who have undergone the procedure.  Hell, I'm sure there are more people with Body Integrity Disorder who feel alienated from their own limbs.  You're advocating for a ban on a "brutal" medical procedure whose "victims" neither feel brutalized nor view themselves as victims.  I bet you've never so much as heard from another man's lips that he was wronged by his circumcision.  Doesn't that tell you something?  And for the record, I didn't pin my entire argument against female circumcision on just loss of sensation....

Furthermore, before you go lobbing about terms such as spurious, I think you might want to make the acquaintance of an American physician or two before you assume them to be persons so ignorant or self-involved so as to propagate a potentially harmful procedure for purposes of religious tradition.  Most American health care providers with whom I have associated are dedicated healers and professionals who would sooner remove a part of their own anatomy before harming a child.  They also happen to be one of the segments of the American populous most strongly disposed to atheism and agnosticism, in my experience.  Not that Americans in general are the religious zealots you seem to believe them to be.

But, now I get to return, at last, to the most egregious claim in your posts, your equating circumcision with female genital cutting -- the argument you continue to stick to that drives any doubt from my mind that you have no first-hand experience with either phenomena or reproductive physiology.  I'll use an excerpt from the afore-mentioned World Health Organization report.  It doesn't say anything all that different from what I wrote in my previous post, but perhaps you will receive it better from this source than from me.  And anyway, I'm not sure I can repeat the details that distinguish the two acts again without occasionally punctuating them with comments about your ignorance and obvious obsession with uncut penises.  And that would really just be petty.

quote:



While both male circumcision and female genital mutilation or cutting (FGM/C) are steeped in culture and tradition, the health consequences of each are drastically different (187). Male circumcision may seem similar as far as definition is concerned – “partial … removal of the external genitalia” – but in practice is substantially different. FGM/C, often referred to as ‘female circumcision’ comprises surgical procedures involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia. It is the manifestation of deep-rooted gender inequality that assigns women an inferior position in societies, and is unambiguously linked to a reduction in women's sexual desire and an irreversible loss of capability for a type of sexual functioning that many women value highly (188).

FGM frequently involves complete removal of the clitoris, as well additional cutting and stitching of the labia resulting in a constricted vaginal opening. The procedures are linked to extensive and in some cases lifelong health problem (189). The immediate complications include severe pain, shock, hemorrhage, tetanusor sepsis, urine retention, ulceration of the genital region and injury to adjacent tissue. Hemorrhage and infection can be of such magnitude as to cause death (189). Moreover the WHO collaborative prospective study in six African Countries on Female Genital Mutilation and Obstetric Outcomes published in June 2006 (190) showed that deliveries to women who underwent FGM/C (all types considered) were significantly more likely to be complicated by Cesarean section, postpartum hemorrhage, episiotomy, extended maternal hospital stay, resuscitation of the infant and hospital impatient perinatal death than deliveries to womenwho have not had FGM/C.

...

There are no known health benefits associated with FGM and no research evidence to suggest that such procedures could reduce the risk of HIV transmission. For these reasons, bodies including WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, the International Council of Nurses, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists consider FGM/C to be universally unacceptable because it is an infringement on the physical and psychosexual integrity of women and girls and is a form of violence against them (189)."

187. Obermeyer, C.M., The consequences of female circumcision for health and sexuality: an update on the evidence. Cult
Health Sex, 2005. 7(5): p. 443-61.

188. Nussbaum, M., Sex and social justice. 1999, New York: Oxford University Press.

189. WHO/UNICEF/UNFPA, Female genital mutilation: a joint WHO/UNICEF/UNFPA statement. 1997, World Health
Organisation: Geneva.

190. Banks, E., Meirik, O., Farley, T., Akande, O., Bathija, H., and Ali, M., Female genital mutilation and obstetric outcome:
WHO collaborative prospective study in six African countries. Lancet, 2006. 367(9525): p. 1835-41.

191. UNAIDS, Male circumcision and comprehensive HIV prevention programming: Guidance for decision makers on
human rights, ethical and legal considerations. 2006, UNAIDS: Geneva



Looking back at the length of my post here, I can't help but feel that I should reiterate that I still believe the value of routine application of male circumcision to be an open debate. What I think people are objecting to here is your characterization of it as a debilitating procedure when the men who underwent it as infants clearly couldn't care less or are, in fact, happy to have undergone it. What I specifically find mind-boggling is your insistence that it somehow an act of comparable harm and violation to female genital mutilation.  That and your completely one-sided misreprsentation of the scientific record on the issue.


quote:

ORIGINAL: Darcyandthedark

Thank you for taking the time to respond Caius.  Whilst I totally agree that stablization is a 'victory' we are still nowhere near the lower end of infection rates and that to me, is concerning.

I don't dismiss circumcision and HIV as a total waste of time, but I do believe it is important to note, that although the stats on HIV and Africa has people putting on their thinking caps and even using the statistics in threads like these, that the infection rates for women(and by that, in children) in Africa is rising, regardless of who is circumcised or not and this is one of the big reasons why many health organisations, particularly world ones, are apprehensive to support the circumcision claim to the extenet that they promote it.

the.dark.


Happy to oblige.  I agree the situation remains one of grave concern, though I think research and the drastically different climate with regard to how the afflicted are viewed are giving us some cause for hope at last.  As to circumcision in Africa, I actually think that's the one place where the value of widespread infant application is most justified.  And I think it will contine to gain in popularity there.




< Message edited by Caius -- 7/11/2008 11:45:38 PM >

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RE: Circumcision - 7/12/2008 12:25:42 AM   
heartcream


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Okay I didnt read every single response but most of them. I dont see why folks would be surprised this is a hot topic. Surgery on a little boy infants dick is so freaking serious in my opinion.

Do you know that they didnt used to use any anathesia during the lopping of their genitalia because it was believed their young nervous system was not in operation yet? Then it was like a big, "My bad." when they showed not only was the nervous system working but it was hyper-sensitive. I think it is barbaric to cut an infant in any way like that. I feel it is outrageous. I have two brothers circumsized. I have not even really seen an uncut one. I grew up thinking uncut was inferior, bad somehow. It is all a bunch of crap. We believe all this crap too.

I would love to see the day when we put the friggin knives away from the penises of baby boys.

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RE: Circumcision - 7/12/2008 6:25:03 AM   
meatcleaver


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Caius, the point is, circumcision is the product of primitive irrational religious belief, the fact you try to defend with medical science says more about your irrational beliefs and suggests your arguments in defence of it are a rationalization.

Since America is the only developed country where physicians routinely recommend it , perhaps you could tell us why American physicians are so superior to physicians in the rest of the world?

Female circumcision is really a red herring in this argument other than it is also an act of mutilation, though it soes illustrate that some people who are against abuse of females don't mind abuse of young unconsenting males.

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RE: Circumcision - 7/12/2008 6:33:20 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Caius

LMAO, Cauterizing? Ahhh, right. Because the head of the circumcised penis has been known to regularly dry out, rub raw, and in some cases just fall right off, huh?  Trust me, the glans does just fine without its little hoodie.  Which makes sense as physiologists and evolutionary biologists long ago largely abandoned the idea the function of the prepuce in most of those mammals that have it is to protect the glans.  I'm not sure where you're getting your information, but it's not from anything written in the last few decades; currently researchers believe one of two possibilities are likely -- that the the foreskin helps protect the developing penis in utero or that it is simply part of our phylogenetic inheritance and is in fact a vestigial organ.



Certainly not from American medical science. Most from a paedetrician friend who has shown me studies of issues surrounding circumcision and its problems and complications, much of which has been collated by national medical bodies in Europe for action in the European Court on Human Rights.

< Message edited by meatcleaver -- 7/12/2008 6:52:03 AM >


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RE: Circumcision - 3/27/2009 12:28:17 PM   
somethndif


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More evidence that circumcision significantly reduces the risk of HIV infection and of other STI's. 

I just thought you should know.  *grin*


http://www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=57690


      Male Circumcision Reduces Men's Risk of Contracting HPV, Herpes, Study Says  
      Male circumcision can reduce a man's risk of contracting the sexually transmitted infections human papillomavirus and herpes, according to a study published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine, the Wall Street Journal reports. The new research "adds to the growing scientific evidence that the procedure helps stem the spread of some" STIs, according to the Journal. It follows studies showing that the procedure can reduce a man's risk of contracting HIV through heterosexual sex. The new study -- conducted by researchers from Johns Hopkins University and Makerere University in Uganda -- used data from trials that were part of these studies about male circumcision and HIV in Africa.
In the new study, researchers compared 1,684 men who were circumcised with a control group of 1,709 uncircumcised men for two years ending in 2007. They found that circumcised men were 35% less likely to contract HPV compared with the uncircumcised men. The circumcised men also were 25% less likely to contract herpes (Shishkin, Wall Street Journal, 3/25). The study found no effect on the transmission of syphilis. The researchers accounted for condom use, the number of sex partners and additional factors when calculating the men's STI risk.
According to the researchers, male circumcision should become an accepted method to help reduce the risk of STIs from heterosexual sex among men, the AP/Google.com reports. "It must be emphasized that protection was only partial, and it is critical to promote the practice of safe sex," the researchers wrote (Chang, AP/Google.com, 3/25). They added that they hope the new evidence will lead to male circumcision becoming a more widespread medical practice, the Journal reports. Researcher Aaron Tobian from Johns Hopkins said, "The scientific evidence for the public health benefits of male circumcision is overwhelming now" (Wall Street Journal, 3/25). The researchers said that they plan to study whether male circumcision reduces the spread of HPV to female sex partners.
About 30% of men worldwide are circumcised. In the U.S., about 79% of men have undergone the procedure, according to the National Center for Health Statistics (AP/Google.com, 3/25). The American Academy of Pediatrics in 1999 issued a statement that said evidence is "not sufficient to recommend routine neonatal circumcision," the Journal reports. According to a study published in the American Journal of Public Health, Medicaid plans in 16 states do not cover circumcision as a result of the academy's stated position on the procedure. In states where Medicaid coverage for circumcision is available, rates are near 70%. In states without such coverage, rates are around 31%. The academy says that it is reviewing its guidelines on circumcision in light of the new data, expecting to complete the review by the end of this year. Susan Blank, chair of the task force on neonatal circumcision at the academy, said, "There's no argument that the trials that have been done are really compelling," adding that the study is "one piece in the discussion on circumcision." Some opponents of male circumcision say that the procedure is not medically necessary and can cause unnecessary distress. They add that proper hygiene and safer-sex practices can prevent STIs (Wall Street Journal, 3/25).
In an accompanying editorial, University of Washington researchers Matthew Golden and Judith Wasserheit write, "Evidence now strongly suggests that circumcision offers an important prevention opportunity and should be widely available" (AP/Google.com, 3/25).
Online The study is available online. The related editorial also is available online. 

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RE: Circumcision - 3/27/2009 1:33:42 PM   
aravain


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~FR~

The BBC put out a rebuttal article to this one. I'll see if I can't find it.

Basically the results were *actually* that DAMP penises have a higher rate of contracting these viruses (which makes sense...) but the chance was nowhere NEAR compellingly high enough to advocate for mass circumcision of all newborns.  EDIT TO ADD: And by damp, I *do* mean wet; water/damp has a tendency to accumulate underneath the foreskin.

In other words... if you teach the boys to stay clean, they're just as likely to catch the diseases as cut boys are as they were before.

Sorry to everyone who would want to use this as a 'see! I told you so!' article... but it's not as revolutionary as the study claims to be.

< Message edited by aravain -- 3/27/2009 1:35:01 PM >

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RE: Circumcision - 3/27/2009 1:59:26 PM   
KaineD


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Lockit

The cock thing again... I just love these convo's!  Okay... as far as I know... no cock should taste dirty and nasty.  If the man is clean... there shouldn't be any of that ukky stuff.  When I asked about it here in the states, I was told it was easier to keep them clean and that is why they circumsized.  What's the big deal of pulling it back and cleaning it?  One washes behind thier ears don't they?  I don't mind a clean one and if he is uncut... well... once you start playing, that skin is pulled back and it looks like an uncut one from what I have seen.  I am no expert, but these things wouldn't be an issue with the men I have been with that were uncut.


Exactly.

It doesn't take long to clean under the skin, and I don't have the lost sensation that circumcized men have.  It's only icky under the skin if you don't clean.

The whole idea of circumcision seems kind of ridiculous to me.  Maybe even slightly barbaric.

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RE: Circumcision - 3/27/2009 2:03:09 PM   
KaineD


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Daddystouch

Interesting. Being myself uncut, I've never considered penis hygiene to be a concern, it gets washed like the rest of me and no complaints.

I think windchymes touched on something though. I find it difficult to beleive that Americans are just more concerned about the cleanliness of their offspring's penises than British parents. I suspect a lot of it is just 'that's what you do' and 'everyone else does it' - tradition, norms, whatever you want to call it - but how did that come about? Both Britain and America are largely Protestant countries with a shared history, so why did America go down the route of circumcision and not Britain?

Btw, I didn't ask because I disapprove of circumcision in any way. I'm just curious - it seems so normal to Americans, yet to alien to most of us here.


Honestly, I think generations of greedy doctors getting easy money for it may be part of it.

(in reply to Daddystouch)
Profile   Post #: 113
RE: Circumcision - 3/28/2009 2:42:46 AM   
aravain


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~FR~

Found it:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7960798.stm

(in reply to KaineD)
Profile   Post #: 114
RE: Circumcision - 3/28/2009 2:52:45 AM   
LookieNoNookie


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Daddystouch

Presuambly the US doesn't have a population made up of 75% Jews and Muslims, so why is there so much circumcision there?



It's fairly simple;....we have an excess of foreskin.

(in reply to Daddystouch)
Profile   Post #: 115
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