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Changing its longstanding neutrality on the issue of circumcision, the American Academy of Pediatrics suggested recently that the health benefits of the procedure outweigh its risks. In order to understand the reasoning behind the shift, along with its likely implications, The Jewish Week spoke to Dr. Andrew Freedman, a urologist at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles. Freedman was one of the members of the task force that issued the new, qualified endorsement of circumcision.
Q: Why did the AAP decide to alter its stance toward circumcision?
A: We felt, based on a series of recent studies that showed that circumcised men were somewhat less likely to contract HIV, penile cancer and other diseases, that it was time to re-examine our position on the procedure. We also knew that there are modest risks in having the procedure done. On balance, we found that it made sense to recommend that insurance companies begin to cover circumcisions.
If circumcision can help to prevent these diseases, then why not simply recommend that every male child be circumcised?
Circumcision only helps in certain cases. For example, in terms of HIV transmission, it only helps if an HIV negative man is having vaginal intercourse with an HIV positive woman. That’s because an intact prepuce has Langerhans cells that are a target of the HIV virus — the uncircumcised penis has a moister, softer, thinner skin that is more prone to trauma than the skin of a circumcised penis, which is tougher and drier. Still, it might take 2,000 circumcisions to prevent one case of HIV transmission, with a complication rate of one in 500 circumcisions. It’s hard to measure the risks and benefits, but we can say that both appear to be quite modest.
So you’re not actually advocating circumcision?
No, we’re not. Circumcision cuts across cultural, religious, medical and aesthetic lines. We don’t see ourselves as partisan in the battle over circumcision. It might be better to be a vegetarian, or to double-knot your shoelaces, but it’s not for us to tell people what’s in the best interest of their children. The benefits aren’t enough to justify it if it doesn’t fit with the values of a particular family.
Why is there such negative sentiment against circumcision?
I can’t really say. However, I can tell you that I’ve received thousands of e-mails over the years from parents telling me that circumcision is a terrible thing to do to a child, because of what they see as an overriding ethical principle of maintaining bodily integrity until the age of consent. This is where there’s such a big divide between America and Europe; it’s much more accepted here, whereas in Europe there is no tradition, outside of the two religious minorities [Jews and Muslims], of circumcision.
Did the task force examine the question of metzitzah b’peh, or oral suction?
We had a lot of discussion about whether or not to incorporate that into our recommendations, but in the end decided not to, since there are so few that are done that way in this country, and they will continue to be done that way whether or not we recommend against it. I do work occasionally with an Orthodox mohel who uses a tube so that there is no oral-genital contact.
Do you think that the new policy will lead to an increase in the number of circumcisions performed in the U.S.?
I doubt it. There’s definitely been a sea change in people’s attitudes. Circumcisions have declined from 1965, which was the peak, when 85 percent of boys were circumcised, to about 55 percent today. The circumcision rate will probably continue to dwindle. [Those against it] have had an influence in making people think twice about circumcision.
Do you have a son and, if so, did you have him circumcised?
Yes, I do. I circumcised him myself on my parents’ kitchen table on the eighth day of his life. But I did it for religious, not medical reasons. I did it because I had 3,000 years of ancestors looking over my shoulder.
This is an edited transcript.
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A man cuts off part of his son's penis on the kitchen table and brags about it using ridiculous excuses about specious "health" benefits. Genital cutting of children is abuse.
This man should NOT be allowed near children with knives. Restaff the AAP with caregivers not abusers.
"I circumcised him myself on my parents’ kitchen table on the eighth day of his life. But I did it for religious, not medical reasons."
It doesn't matter what non-therapeutic reason he did it for. It was still a human rights violation. This is so tragic - when will baby boys receive the equal protection they deserve?
I can't believe the AAP allowed such a biased man to take part in creating the stance on circumcision. He clearly has personal interest in keeping male circumcision legal and paid for by insurance: his religion, his job, his penis, and his son's penis. I wonder if he even bothered to ask himself "Is it ethical for me to hold my son down and carve my religion into his penis?"
Jewish circumcision has changed many many times so I wonder what exactly is being referred to during this 3,000 year mentioned. (changes ref. Glick's Marked in Your Flesh). That aside, Dr. Freedman should recant the endorsement and step down from the Task Force on Circumcision for being obviously biased which shows in his stated past behavior and by the omission of papers that are show circumcision as harmful. Parents can search the web and see how off the AAP has gotten. The Task Force now makes the APP look ridiculous. So ridiculous that others are quick to point out the crazies.
Psychology Today
Moral Landscapes
Living the life that is good for one to live.
by Darcia Narvaez, Ph.D.
What Happened to Ethics in Pediatric Medicine?
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/moral-landscapes/201209/what-happened-ethics-in-pediatric-medicine/comments
(Bottom line) "The AAP has lost its credibility, and we should no longer view it as a valid medical association."
Circumcision is a matter for the law in Australia. Tasmania is currently considering circumcision law reform. The recommended reform allows for religious circumcision: https://theconversation.edu.au/tasmanian-report-calls-for-groundbreaking-reform-of-circumcision-law-9105
"But I did it for religious, not medical reasons. I did it because I had 3,000 years of ancestors looking over my shoulder."
Quoth the moslem, when asked why he sliced off his daughter's clitoris.
Freedman's comment about Langerhans cells has absolutely no basis in fact or research. It merely reflects the OPINION (without evidence) of one researcher who was attempting to posit a biologic plausibility to the Africa HIV findings.
It would be important to show such plausibility to the findings, because they are otherwise IMPLAUSIBLE. They have no predictive power in the real world. For example, the mostly-circumcised US adult population has three times the HIV incidence seen in Europe, where circumcision is rare.
Despite Freedman's mention of it, the AAP task force completely ignored the ethics of amputating healthy normal body parts for debatable benefits attainable by less destructive means, when the decision could just as easily wait for the patient's own rational informed consent. Nobody on the task force has a foreskin, which must have taken some effort to rig since most of the world is intact. If they only knew; foreskin feels REALLY good.
Dr Freeman is forgetful. The AAP does recommend against metzitzah b'peh: "The Task Force advises against the practice of mouth-to-penis contact during circumcision, which is part of som religious practices, because it poses serious infectious risk to the child." (p760)
Some things the policy did NOT consider worth investigating further, after failing to find any statistics, were major complications and death from circumcision. Interesting that Task Force members have received - and chosen to ignore - "thousands of emails" from people with ethical concerns about circumcision. Many of those will be men - and not all gentiles - who bitterly resent that they were circumcised before they could resist. The issue is not not so much "bodily integrity" (though that is what is guaranteed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) as bodily autonomy, that is, freedom.
While I appreciated Dr. Freedman's attempt at softening the blow of what the AAP published in their recent revised Circ Policy, I think he is avoiding conflict with the horrible damage the policy will likely inflict on thousands of innocent helpless infants. This policy if based on inconclusive and incorrect data, is extremely biased, and may potentially put millions of dollars in physician's pockets at the expense of fearful parents and innocent non-consenting infants and children. Quite frankly he is promoting an unenforced crime - no surprise since the AAP also tried to reintroduce female mutilation by renaming it "female circumcision" after it was deemed unlawful. Shame on Dr. Freedman. Nice touch when he closed with basically admitting to "cutting his own son due to religious pressure" - great example buddy, you doubted your own beliefs (which happen to be a violation of freedom of religion and human rights).
A physician with religious bias should not be a member of the AAP Task Force on Circumcision. The Task Torce also has a member that advocates for female circumcision. The Task Force members were chosen or volunteered only because they are pro-circ. The bias is 100%
Where is the AAP Task Force for Genital Integrity?