QUEENSLAND LAW REFORM COMMISSION
RESEARCH PAPER
Note:
APPENDIX 1: HEALTH INSURANCE COMMISSION STATISTICS: CIRCUMCISIONS - AUSTRALIA 1988 - 1993
APPENDIX 2: NUMBER OF CIRCUMCISIONS PERFORMED - QUEENSLAND PUBLIC HOSPITALS ON PUBLIC PATIENTS 1988-1991
APPENDIX 3: CIRCUMCISION AND HIV INFECTION
Chairman: The Hon Mr Justice G N Williams
Deputy Chair: Her Honor Judge H O'Sullivan
Members: Ms R G Atkinson, Mr W G Briscoe, Mr W A Lee, Ms L Willmott
Secretary: Ms S P Fleming
Principal Legal Officer: Ms P Cooper
Project and Research: Ms J Daley
Consultants: Ms M Westbrook
Administrative Officers: Ms P McCarthy, Ms J Smith
Previous Queensland Law Reform Commission publications on this Reference: Consent by Young People to Medical Treatment, Information Paper, May 1993.
The Commission's premises are located on the 13th floor, 179 North Quay, Brisbane. The postal address is P. O. Box 312, Roma Street, Q 4003. Telephone (07) 227 4544. Facsimile (07) 227 9045.
Queensland Law Reform Commission
December 1993.
This reference is part of a wider reference given to the Commission by the Attorney-General in its Fourth Programme of work.1 The full terms of the reference are set out in item 4 of the Programme, namely:
Examine the rights relating to consent to medical procedures by:
(a) children
(b) intellectually disabled adults (including consent to sterilization.
The Commission has divided the terms of reference into two major parts. The first part concerns consent by young people to medical procedures. The second part concerns consent to medical procedures on intellectually disabled adults.2
The first part of the reference has been divided into distinct research projects to enable the Commission to deal with particular issues in detail and to avoid confusion between seemingly disparate matters. The research projects currently being undertaken include:
(i) consent to medical examinations in child abuse cases;
(ii) female genital mutilation
(iii) male circumcision
(iv) general legislation on consent to medical treatment of young people
(v) sterilisation of young people.
(vi) treatment of severely defective neonates.
This Research Paper concerns item (iii) above.
In May and June 1993 advertisements were placed in the Courier-Mail calling for public submissions on Consent by Young People to Medical Treatment. An Information Paper outlining a wide range of issues was available to assist anyone interested in making a written or oral submission. Also a number of media interviews were given by a member of the Commission to elicit public interest in the matters being dealt with.
Approximately 300 copies of the information paper have been distributed and, to date, approximately 160 oral and written submissions have been received. 24 of these submissions relate specifically to consent to circumcision of male infants.
In addition, a number of individuals and organisations with a particular interest in male circumcision have been approached for information and opinions on relevant matters raised by the reference. The assistance of those who have made submissions and others who provided information and comments to the Commission in the preparation of this paper is greatly appreciated.
From the Commission's research to date, it is apparent that there are two quite vocal sides of the debate on routine infant male circumcision. One side advocates the practice, primarily on a preventative health basis or on religious grounds. The other side opposes the practice, primarily on human rights and preservation of bodily integrity grounds. Both sides rely on medical evidence and opinion to support their views.
This Research Paper has been produced to assist the Commission in understanding the issues and arguments on the topic of routine infant male circumcision. It is being circulated to individuals and organisations with an interest or expertise in the issues raised, to verify the accuracy and significance of the information contained in the Research Paper, and to seek suggestions as to the most appropriate approach to adopt.
There will be wider community consultation on routine infant male circumcision and other matters to be dealt with during the course of this reference, and at a later date.
The practice of circumcising3 male infants dates at least back to 2340-2180 BC. Egyptian representations of Pharaonic times show the circumcised penis. It is apparent that male circumcision had been practised in Egypt for many thousands of years.4 Because of the uniqueness of Egyptian records, it is not possible to make any conclusive statements about either the origins of male circumcision or about its spread.
In Genesis 17 of the Old Testament God is said to have directed Abraham to circumcise himself, his son and all other males in his house.5
10 -- This is my covenant, which ye shall keep, between me and you and thy seed after thee; Every man child among you shall be circumcised.
11 -- And ye shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin; and it shall be a token of the covenant betwixt me and you.
12 -- And he that is eight days old shall be circumcised among you, every man child in your generations, he that is born in the house, or bought with money of any stranger, which is not of thy seed.
13 -- He that is born in thy house, and he that is bought with money, must needs be circumcised: and my covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant.
14 -- And the uncircumcised man whose flesh of his foreskin is not circumcised, that soul shall be cut off from his people; he hath broken my covenant ....
23 -- And Abraham took Ishmael his son, and all that were born in his house, and all that were bought with money, every male among the men of Abraham's house; and circumcised the flesh of their foreskin in the selfsame day, as God has said unto him.
24 -- And Abraham was ninety years old, when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin.
25 -- And Ishmael his son was thirteen years old, when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin.
26 -- In the selfsame day was Abraham circumcised and Ishmael his son.
27 -- And all the men in his house, born in the house, and bought money with the stranger, were circumcised with him.
In the Islamic religion, Abraham was the first Prophet to be circumcised.6 Dr S N Khan states:7
Circumcision, encouraged in Islam and widely practised by Muslims, is a tradition of the Prophet and an important ritual. It is recommended that it be performed on the newborn but in some communities, it is done just before puberty.
In a submission to the Commission, it was stated:8
We wish to emphasize that Muslim parents or guardians throughout the world enjoy the right to consent to circumcision of young boys on the ground of authentic religious reasons, although some doctors may support it on purely medical grounds.
Rabbi John Levi has summarised the mainstream Jewish attitude to circumcision as:9
Jewish male children must be circumcised on the eight day of life unless there is a danger to the child's life because of the operation, in which case it may be delayed. (The traditional eight days are counted by including the first day of life: a child born on a Sunday is circumcised the following Sunday). Circumcision in Jewish life is a religious ceremony and should, if possible, be performed by a Jewish doctor who has been trained to do it and will read the appropriate religious service and name the child.
Both Jews and Muslims circumcise in accordance with Abraham's covenant with God. Most of the major religions in Australia do not promote routine circumcision or consider it to be a mandated religious practice.10
Non-religious theories of the origin of male circumcision suggest that it was practised as a punitive measure, as a puberty or premarital rite, as an absolution against the feared toxic influences of vaginal (hymeneal) blood, for other health reasons, as a mark of slavery or for cosmetic reasons.
Some claim it as diminution of human sacrifice.11
Hosken observes:12
Some anthropologists also speculate how or if the tradition of male circumcision, the removal of the prepuce, is related to cutting off the entire penis which was offered as a sacrifice to the gods. This is said to have been practiced in ancient Egypt. The custom to use the male genitals as war trophies was also widespead as reported in Middle Eastern history, and has also been recorded by the ancient Egyptians.
The Gallas, Somalis and the Abyssinians, it is related, cut the complete genital apparatus off their enemies. Some warriers offered the genitalia of their enemies as trophies to the girls they chose to marry. To use male genitalia as war trophies continues to be present in some parts of Africa; for instance it was reported in the two recent upheavals in Zaire (Biafra and Shaba Province). It was also reported in Vietnam.
Circumcision of both boys and girls came into fashion long before Islam, and was practiced in many different areas of Africa. The practice was unknown to the Romans until they conquered Egypt and the Middle East. The Copts in Egypt, and the Abyssinians (Ethiopians) have practiced circumcision of boys and girls (at a much younger age than the typical puberty rites of Sub-saharan Africans) from prehistoric times.
It is stated that both the Jews and the Arabs learned circumcision in Egypt, rather than vice versa. The rule in the Middle East, as will as in Sub-saharan Africa, is that a boy cannot get married unless he is circumcised. The same rule applied to excision [in females], which has acquired much the same rhetoric and similar, though less important, rituals as the male operation. All rituals connected with men are more important in the Middle East, as well as most of Africa because of the dominant position of men. The purpose and result of excision and infibulation [in females] are quite the opposite of the male operation, though they are often correlated, a fact which was and is not at all known to the practitioners.
... excision [in females] is practiced to affirm the sex of the individual, because it is believed that the clitoris represents a male element in a female, and the prepuce of the penis represent femininity in a boy. Hence, the girls are excised and the boys circumcised in order to establish their sex in society.
In a number of Western countries such as the United States of America and Australia, the practice of male circumcision for non-religious reasons became prevalent by the beginning of the twentieth century.
Within the miasma of myth and ignorance [when the aetiology of most diseases was unknown], a theory emerged that masturbation caused many and varied ills. It seemed logical to some physicians to perform genital surgery on both sexes to stop masturbation.13
In 1891 P C Remondino, MD, advocated circumcision to prevent or cure alcholism, epilepsy, asthma, hernia, gout, rheumatism, curvature of the spine, and headaches.14
During the First World War circumcision was promoted for hygiene reasons and for prevention of venereal diseases.15
In the 1930's it was considered that circumcision prevents cancer of the penis.16 In the 1950's it was claimed that cervical cancer occurs in women because their partners are not circumcised.17
In World War II male troops were encouraged to be circumcised, given limited personal hygiene facilities in overseas combat zones. Circumcision is not now encouraged unless the person presents with a medical condition indicating a need for circumcision.18
By the 1960's the majority of Australian and virtually all United States andCanadian male infants were circumcised.19
Circumcision of boys and adolescents is also a part of Australian Aboriginal culture, at least in certain area. John Cawte notes:20
Circumcision in adolescence will probably remain a feature of Aboriginal cultural life in the Centre. It provides an occasion for social integration, personal identity, and a holiday. But changes must be expected with growing westernisation. For example, requests are being heard for the operative procedure to be carried out with proper surgical and aseptic precautions ... with retention of the elaborate tribal ritual before, during and after the surgical ceremony.
Many educated Aborigines who have grown up without undergoing the circumcision ceremony, because of Mission affliations at the time, express an uncomfortable sense of incomplete tribal responsibility and status. They are asking for the operation, even at mature ages. The European doctor who offers his service finds himself questioning whether his own culture does not circumcise at the wrong time, when the little boys are too young to appreciate the psychological and social implications of the kind that Aborigines understand very well. Certainly he will have no wish to interfere with the Aboriginal view of the procedure's proper timing.21
Money et al have described the circumcision practices of the Yoingu Aboriginal community at Arnhemland. At the age of 8 or 9 boys go through an initiation ceremony of circumcision or `dhapi':22
The ceremonial initiates among the elders carry the boy off, safe from the view of girls and women, encircling him in close formation. One of them lies on his back on the ground, the boy lying face upward upon him and pinioned in a locked embrace. Another man holds down the boy's legs. A third does the actual cutting. In ancient times a stone knife was used. Today the instrument is a razor blade. The cutting is more likely to be a series of dissection movements rather than swift incision. The boy may cry out with the pain. Immediately the foreskin is removed, the men in charge carry the boy into the bush nearby where he is passed through the smoke of a fire for spiritual cleansing. The bleeding of his penis is stopped by cauterizing with a piece of hot charcoal and the application of hot, wet leaves. He returns to his home camp-fire and there rests and recuperates about a week.
The meaning of the ceremony is, like the origin of circumcision itself, lost in the unrecorded annals of prehistory. My own theoretical guess is that is represents a substitute for, and attenuation of, a still earlier practice of human sacrifice. One may see a similarity with the way in which the symbol of the Crucifixion became a substitute for, and attenuation of the animal sacrifice of Old Testamenttimes.
Similarly, Meggit refers to the circumcision for boys between 11 and 13 in the Walbiri people of Central Australia.
The rite of circumcision and its attendant ceremonies firmly and unequivocably establish a youth's status in Walbiri society. Should he fail to pass through these rites, he may not enter into his father's lodge, he may not participate in religious ceremonies, he cannot acquire a marriage line, he cannot legitimately obtain a wife; in short, he cannot become a social person.
Meggit also notes that:24
The Walbiri explicitly equate circumcision with ritual killing.
Subincision is performed on youths of the Walbiri people at 17 years of age. Subincision has been described by Meggit as follows:25
To the accompaniment of loud chanting by the company, the man deftly slices open the youth's penis from the meatus to a point about an inch along the urethra. An elder brother also hold the penis, to ensure that the inside bone
is not cut, while others brothers stand ready to kill the incisor if he bungles his task. The operator withdraws immediately he makes the cut ... it is not until he is betrothed, a couple of years after he has been sub-incised that he is regarded as an adult.
Over the last two decades the popularity of neonatal circumcision has decreased.26 By 1980 only 40 percent of Australian male babies were circumcised.27
It is unclear what the current rate of circumcision is in Australia, although estimates range from 25 per cent28 to 35 per cent.29
Note:
The number of circumcisions qualifying for Medicare reimbursement in Australia has remained fairly static over the last 5 years30 and may have actually decreased slightly on a per capita basis, given the increase in the number of live births over that time.
The highest proportion of circumcisions Australia-wide and in Queensland were performed on infants less than 6 months of age, which suggests that they were performed for religious, cultural or perceived prophylactic purposes.31 Relatively few circumcisions are performed on public patients in public hospitals in Queensland. Some public hospitals have adopted a policy of not performing routine neonatal circumcisions. When circumcisions are performed in public hospitals, they tend to be performed on older children.32 This may indicate a reluctance to circumcise newborns. It could also indicate a medical need to circumcise older infants.
In the United States, circumcision rates remain high at between 50 - 75 per cent.33 It has been estimated that between 75 per cent34 and 85 per cent of the world's male population are not and will not be circumcised.35 In most European countries circumcision is not a routine approved procedure.
Note:
Various methods have been used or promoted for circumcision or by proceduresdesigned to bring about the same results.36
The circumcision which Abraham performed on himself and other male members of his household was the removal of the tip of the prepuce. This procedure is referred to as Milah by Jews and was practised by Jews for approximately 2,000 years.
During the Hellenic period and at least by AD 140 a second step to ritual circumcision (Pariah) became prevalent. This involved the tearing of the remaining lining of the prepuce off the glans (the head of the penis to which the prepuce is normally attached during infancy) and, with a sharpened fingernail, removing all mucoustissue that comprises the inner lining of the prepuce.
A final step in this circumcision procedure, the Metzitzah, was added to the rite during the Talmudic period (AD 500-625):37
Now follows the exsuction of the wound in such a manner that the Mohel takes the circumcised member in his mouth and with two or three draughts sucks the blood out of the wounded part. He then takes a mouthful of wine from a goblet and spurts it, in two or three intervals, on the wound.
Not all Jews adopted this procedure. Some modified it by including the use of a glass tube to avoid the spead of disease through mouth to genital contact.
Recently, with the spread of HIV, the Rabbinate also approved placing cotton in the glass tube to prevent blood from entering the Mohel's mouth.
Most Jewish baby boys in Australia are now circumcised by doctors using the same procedures as are described below for non-ritual circumcision, although a religious ceremony would normally also take place at the same time.
This involves the surgical removal of the prepuce from the glans. Because it is common for babies as young as 8 days old to be circumcised, it is not the usual practise to anaesthetise the child.
Commonly an instrument is used not dissimilar in appearance from a pair of pliars. The foreskin is removed and the ends are sutured. In free-hand excision, clamps may be used.
A more recent practice involves inserting a plastic ring with a grove on its periphery inside the prepuce. A string is tied around the outside of the prepuce over the glans. A plastic bell fits over the top of the prepuce. The head of the device is broken off, removing the prepuce. It is trimmed by the doctor. The ring, which clamps the wound, falls off within a week.
Because the vast majority of circumcisions of males in Australia take place within the first few days of life, the question of whether or not the child consents to the procedure rarely arises. If circumcision is suggested for child who is old enough to understand the nature and consequences of the procedure, then it is apparent that his consent should be sought.38
For infants, the parents or guardian have traditionally been considered as the most appropriate parties to consent or refuse to consent to the procedure taking place.
The overriding qualification to a parent or guardian's ability to consent to any medical procedure being performed on their child is that the procedure has to be in the child's best interests.39
Obviously, if a child is circumcised against the wishes of his parents or guardians, or against the child's wishes if he is mature enough to understand the procedure, in other than an emergency situation, those performing the operation and those associated with it may be criminally or civilly liable for assault. They may also be liable for damages resulting from any negligence in the procedure.
Any voluntary touching of another person is generally unlawful unless the other person has consented to that touching. Without consent, even the slightest degree of physical contact may give rise to a civil claim (eg for assault) or to a criminal assault charge.40
Under the criminal law, a person can consent to what would otherwise be a simple assault but consent does not remove criminal responsibility for more serious injuries such as wounding being done to that person by another. However, a doctor would not be criminally liable for grievous bodily harm (such as the removal of an organ or the amputation of a limb) if the procedure was for the patient's benefit and was reasonable having regard to the patient's state at the time and to all the circumstances
(Queensland Criminal Code section 282).
In addition to the requirement that medical procedures cannot, except in emergency situation be carried out on individuals without consent, such consent must be real
consent. Consent is not real consent if it has been obtained by fraud or by misrepresentation as to the nature of the procedure and/or where the patient has not been informed in broad terms of the nature of the proposed procedure before giving consent.41
The real
consent of a person to the touching by another, relieves that other from civil liability even though the other may be criminally liable for his or her actions. Consent is intended to ensure protection for the patient against unauthorised interference with his or her right to bodily integrity and, for the health-care provider, against possible legal action. There are certain statutory exceptions to a health-care provider's liability for treating a patient without his or her consent - for example, when the procedure is to be performed on a person in an emergency situation in circumstances where the person is unable to consent.
In the absence of `real' consent, circumcision of male infants would fall within the definition of assault under section 245 of the Queensland Criminal Code. It might also be an offence endangering life or health. A number of criminal offences may be committed depending on the circumstances of the case, such as:
Any person who, with intent to maim, disfigure, or disable, any person, or to do some grievous bodily harm to any person ... [u]nlawfully wounds or does any grievous bodily harm to any person by any means whatever ... is guilty of a crime. [maximum sentence of imprisonment for life]
Circumcision may result in disfigurement (detracting from personal appearance), disablement (creating a permanent disability), maiming (permanent injury).43To constitute awoundingthe true skin must be broken,44 which is an obvious result of circumcision.
Bodily harmis defined in section 5 of the Code as any bodily harm with health or comfort. Alternatively, it may be appropriate to try the matter summarily before a magistrate as an assault occasioning bodily harm under section 343A of the Criminal Code (with a maximum sentence of a fine of one thousand dollars and in default 2 years imprisonment or two years imprisonment in the first instance).
Any person who unlawfully does grievous bodily harm to another is guilty of a crime [maximum sentence of imprisonment for 14 years]
Any person who -
(1) unlawfully wounds another is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment with hard labour for seven years.
A person who wounds another or causes bodily harm to another may be excused for his or her conduct under section 282 of the QueenslandCriminal Code:
Surgical operations. A person is not criminally responsible for performing in good faith and with reasonable care and skill a surgical operation upon any person for his benefit, or upon an unborn child for the preservation of the mother's life, if the performance of the operation is reasonable having regard to the patient's state at the time and to all the circumstances of the case.45
Whether or not circumcision would be for the benefit of the particular child, and whether or not it would be reasonable having regard to the child's state at the time and to all the circumstances of the case, would need to be assessed on a case-by-case basis.
In Queensland there is no statutory definition of surgical operations, nor is there a statutory restriction on whom can perform a surgical operation.
A person cannot hold an appointment in Queensland as a physician, surgeon or medical officer in any public or private hospital or other institution or society for affording medical relief in sickness, infirmity, or old age, or as a medical inspector, medical officer of health, or health officer unless he or she is a registered medical practitioner.46
However, there is nothing in the criminal law preventing any person performing surgical procedures on others, provided that they are performed in good faith and with reasonable care and skill ... for the other's benefit ... if the performance of the operation is reasonable having regard to the patient's state at the time and to all the circumstances of the case.
47
Whether or not medically qualified, a person performing a circumcision on a child in Queensland would be under a duty to have reasonable skill and to use reasonable care in doing such an act.48 The person will be held to have caused any consequences which result to the life or health of the child by any reasonof any omission to observe or perform that duty.
Dr Douglas Gairdner49 has described how the prepuce and glans50 develop from the same block of tissue before birth and are still in the course of developing at birth. At birth, there is a common layer of squamous epithelium51 between the glans and the deep surface of the prepuce, and this explains why 96% of male infants have a non-retractile prepuce. The prepuce gradually becomes detached from the glans and retractable over it. In 90% of boys this process is completed by the age of 5years.
In the first two years of life the prepuce functions to protect the glans and especially the urinary opening (meatus), from the effects of `nappy rash' (ammoniacal dermatitis) and protects the glans from irritation and faecal material. The prepuce is one of the most sensitive parts of the penis and is said to enhance sensation during sexual intercourse.52
Note:
With the removal of the prepuce the exposed glans develops dermal layers up to twelve times the skin thickness. This has been described as the formation of a cornified layer - an additional outer covering of compressed, dead cells. Due to this scarification process, circumcision may render the penis less sensitive.53
There appear to be no universally accepted, unequivocal medical indications for neonatal circumcision.54
The Australian Medical Association does not encourage routine neonatal circumcision. The Association has written to the Commission stating:55
Circumcision of the newborn male is a practice which the Australian medical profession generally discourages, always recognising that there may be medical justification for it in conditions such as phimosis. While the AMA has no formal policy on this matter, it generally supports the relevant position adopted by the Australian College of Paediatrics.
The Australian College of Paediatrics policy statement reads:
The Royal Australian College of Obstetricians and Gyncaecologists also discourages routine male circumcision. The College states:56
The suggested benefit does not outweigh the financial cost of the procedure on a community basis and the real cost of the occasional fatality in male infants directly arising from circumcision.
The Queensland Nurses Union does not have a specific policy on routine circumcision but would support the refusal of any of its members to participate in the procedure.57
Neonatal circumcision should not be considered when the neonate is premature, has a neonatal illness, any congenital anomaly (most importantly hypospadious58) or has a bleeding disorder. The procedure should never be performed within the first 24 hours of life.59
Routine neonatal circumcision continues to be performed by a number of general medical practitioners and possibly specialists in Queensland.
There are a number of conditions which may indicate a need for circumcision in older children or men.
This is a medical condition in which the prepuce will not pull back over the glans of the penis because the `opening' is too tight. This is not a problem for young boys. When erections occur the preputial opening may split. Healing then causes linear contraction and further narrowing of the circular orifice. If very tight, it may restrict urine flow and cause ballooning of the preputial sac. It may also lead to infection or balanoposthitis.61 This would be an indication for circumcision.
This is an uncommon condition resulting in the inability of the phimosed prepuce to be pulled forward again. The prepuce tends to became oedematous63and a tight constriction then develops at the coronal sulcus behind the glans, aggravating the condition. This is more common in older men and rare in children. Circumcision will be necessary in younger men but in the elderly a dorsal slit, under local aeaesthetic will suffice. In one study, paraphimosis in boys was found to be usually caused by an overzealous parent forcibly retracting, in the bath, a still congenitally adherent foreskin in a child less than three years of age, on the misguided advice of a doctor.64
Adhesions normally exist between the prepuce and the glans from birth are are progressively broken down as erections occur. By three or four years of age the prepuce is usually fully retractable. Plugs of smegma65 may be retained behind the prepuce and be mistaken for pus
or may predispose to infection.
Dr E P Arnold has observed:66
Non-retractable prepuce is not usually an indication for circumcision and can be managed conservatively in the expectation that the adhesions will break down as the child grows. If infections become a problem, the adhesions can be separated an hour after applying a transcutaneous local anaesthetic cream (e.g. EMCA). [sic, should be EMLA] For two weeks after this, daily saline baths, gently withdrawing the prepuce for cleaning and then applying vaseline to the glans before pulling the prepuce forward again are useful manoeuvres to prevent re-formation of adhesions. Should they recur or infections remain a problem, circumcision should be advised.
Leitch observes:67
A prepuce made fully retractable after the age of 3 years by simple separation of adhesions with a blunt probe, not necessarily under anaesthesia, would assist hygiene, decrease balanitis and true phimosis, and prevent the accumulation of smegma, thus decreasing the risk of carcinoma of the penis, possibly to an almost negligible level.
By 16 years of age only about one per cent of boys still have a non-retractable prepuce.68
This is a condition of inflammation of the glans penis, usually where phimosis is present.
There are those who argue strongly in favour of routine circumcision. For example, a Brisbane general practitioner, Dr T. Russell states:70
The evidence of the benefits of neonatal circumcision is now so strong that it may be unethical or even negligent not to recommend circumcision.
A United States medical practitioner, much relied upon by pro-routine circumcision lobbyists, Dr Edgar Schoen states:71
The benefits of routine circumcision of newborns as a preventive health benefit far exceed the risks of the procedure ...
A number of arguments have been promoted for routine male circumcision on the basis of preventive health.
It is important for uncircumcised males to retract and clean beneath the foreskin to avoid infections. The need for regular cleaning is often used as an argument in favour of circumcision. Of course hygiene is widely regarded as a preventative health measure to a wide range of illnesses and disease. Cleaning the uncircumcised penis has been likened to cleaning the intact labia of females - both of which could be regarded as a commonsense preventative health measure.72 Circumcision reduces the need for males to practice genital hygiene.
But, as Dr Hirst states:73
One frequently hears the argument that my father had to have it done in the Middle East in World War II
or my brother in Vietnam ... so let's prevent that risk'. Is is not facetious to suggest that removal of an organ, however small it might be, is the appropriate way to obviate aproblem of cleanliness?
Obviously, if girls can be taught genital and menstrual hygiene, boys can be taught penile hygiene, although some may reject this analogy.Dr Russell has written:74
What man, after a night of passion, is going to perform penile hygiene
before rolling over and snoring the night away (with pathogenic organisms multiplying under the prepuce)?
Many groups which have traditionally practiced routine circumcision, such as Jews, Muslims, Australian Aborginals - originally lived in dry, arid conditions where facilities for personal hygiene were not optimal. Circumcision may therefore have had appeal as a prophylactic measure against balanitis.
There is some evidence that circumcision may reduce a man's risk of developing cancer of the penis.
Carcinoma of the penis is exceptionally rare. In countries where circumcision is not routinely performed, such as Denmark and Japan, the rates of penile cancer are similar to those found in countries like the United States where the majority of males have been circumcised.75 The incidence of cancer is much lower in the uncircumcised when associated with good hygiene. Dr J S Black notes:76
Studies have shown that in uncircumcised cultures with good hygiene the incidence of cancer of the penis is low, but in circumcised cultures with poor hygiene the incidence is high. Clearly it is good hygiene, not the presence orabsence of the foreskin that matters.
Dr M L Sorrells notes:77
All studies report almost total absence of hygiene in all victims of the cancer ... the relationship of circumcision to cancer of the penis seems real, but even minimal hygienic standards are probably just as effectivein prevention.
Cancer of circumcised penises has been reported:
Dr Schoen reports:78
There are 750 to 1000 cases of penile cancer annually, in the United States; however in the past twenty years only 3 cases of penile cancer have been reported in men who had been circumcised as newborns. There have been six major studies of cancer of the penis in the United States since 1932, and none of the more than 1600 patients studied had been circumcised in infancy.
Marshall determined the incidence of carcinoma of the penis in the United States to be 0.2 to 0.9 per 100,000 uncircumcised males. Using this data, he estimated that between 111,000 and 500,000 circumcisions needed to be performed to prevent one case of penile cancer.79 Hirst80 refers to older United Kingdom figures suggesting that such a number of circumcisions might result in in more than 20 neonatal deaths although recent papers quote lower mortality rates.
Other studies have reported:81
There has been the suggestion of a link between lack of circumcision and the incidence of cancer of the prostrate.(sic) There is no evidence for this assertion.86
It has been suggested that a lower-than-usual incidence of carcinoma of the cervix in Jewish women is due to the universal circumcised state of their sexual partners. There is no scientific basis for this suggestion.
It has been noted however, that Muslim women, whose husbands are circumcised in infancy, have a much higher rate of cervical cancer than Jewish women. Parsees of India, who do not circumcise, have a much lower rate of cervical cancer than their Muslim neighbors who do circumcise.87 Complete circumcision is found about as frequently in husbands of patients with cancer of the cervix as in husbands of controls.88
The strongest predisposing factors in cervical cancer are a history of intercourse at an early age and multiple sexual partners, sexual hygiene, parity,89 contraceptives, coitus interruptus, and frequent intercourse.90
For each of these cancers, it appears that more factors are involved than circumcision and non-circumcision. Personal hygiene seems to be the most consistently relevant factor.91 The incidence of breast cancer in women and prostrate (sic) cancer in men are far more common in Australia than cancer of the penis, yet it is rare to hear learned arguments in favour of routine mastectomies for women and routine prostatectomies for men in orderto prevent such cancer from developing.
Note:
Such infections are said to be more common in uncircumcised male babies. The evidence for this is scientifically suspect as it all comes from hospital-based retrospective studies.92 Bacterial infection of the glans and prepuce are relatively uncommon in the child where there is no known aetiological factor, whereas in adults it usually occurs as a result of phimosisor poor hygiene.93
Unless men are sexually active and in a risk group for contracting sexually transmitted diseases, circumcision will not offer protection against such diseases. Boys, whether circumcised or uncircumcised, are at far less risk of contracting sexually transmitted diseases including the Human Immunodeficiency Virus prior to becoming sexually active or adopting a high-risk lifestyle. Presumably, at that point, they would be old enough to consent on their own behalf to circumcision if they believed that would offer them some protection.
The risk of transmitting or contracting certain sexually transmitted diseases including the HIV virus may be increased for men already in a risk group who have uncircumcised penises althoughother factors may be relevant.94
In 1947 a Canadian study on the incidence of circumcision amongst soldiers with venereal disease found on that uncircumcised men were nine times more likely than circumcised men to have syphilis and almost three times more likely to have gonorrhoea. It was observed however that cleanliness of the genitals was commonly neglected among the soldiers. Further, tears and abrasions of the prepuce were often noticed on sick parade:
Small abrasions of the delicate coronal membrane must be very common during brothel intercourse. Both provide a portal of entry for the spirochaete.95
In a 1983 Western Australia study of men attending a special treatment clinic it was estimated that uncircumcised men were twice as likely as circumcised men to have herpes genitalis or gonorrhoea, and five times as likely to develop candidiasis or syphilis.96
No attempt was made in the study to measure the socioeconomic status of the subjects - it had previously been suggested that uncircumcised men tend to come from lower socioeconomic backgrounds and to have poorer personal hygiene and a greater chance of exposure to infection.97 Another possibility canvassed by the researchers is that circumcised and uncircumcised men have similar rates of disease but that uncircumcised men are more likely to develop and thus, to seek medical attention. This was considered most likely to be so in the case of candidiasis.
The authors concluded:98
The evidence at presence certainly does not warrant the recommendation of circumcision on the ground that it prevents Sexually Transmitted Diseases. If these findings are confirmed in other studies, it would seem that attention should be directed to the improvement of personalhygiene among uncircumcised men.
The most recent available research findings on the relationship between lack of circumcision and HIV infection indicate that, for men involved in a high risk lifestyle, circumcision may offer some protection from HIV infection, although not all studies reveal such a link.99
The protective effect of circumcision may be reduced when other factors are taken into account such as history of genital sores.100
In a 1988 study in Nairobi of 340 men attending a sexually transmitted disease clinic uncircumcised heterosexual men were found to be 2.7 times more likely to have HIV infection than uncircumcised men.101 Genital ulcers may increase men's susceptibility to HIV, or they may increases the infectivity of women infected with HIV. The researchers conclude that the intact prepuce may operate to increase the susceptibility to HIV. One suggested explanation given by Nairobi researchers for the link between lack of circumcision and HIV infection is:102
The presence of an intact foreskin provides a warm, moist, environment that allows a longer time for viral survival and penetration.
Further, the cornified skin covering which develops on the circumcised penis may protect it from the microabrasions which facilitate HIV entry.103
The prepuce may also be subject to trauma during intercourse.104
Hirst reports:105
Symptomatic monilial balanitis, usually resulting from sexual contact, is a common problem seen almost exclusively in the uncircumcised, particularly in a population where oral contraceptives are in widespead use. Treatment of both parties usually eradicates the infection, but occasionally circumcision is necessaryto effect a cure.
Note:
There may be an argument that for a child to be uncircumcised in a family or country where most males have been circumcised will place the child in an uncomfortable and embarrassing position. This may be more so when the community within which he lives has a religious or strong cultural reason for circumcising the males.
As the majority of boys in Australia are now uncircumcised, it is less likely than it was a few years ago, that a boy will be made to feel out-of-place amongst his peers for being uncircumcised. This should also be the case within families when the majority of fathers are uncircumcised. Presumably the old argument of fathers wanting their sons to look like them is less significant.
Apart from the controversy concerning the possible health reasons for removal of the prepuce and the prophylactic advantages of routine removal, a number of fundamental arguments have been promoted against routine circumcision of male infants. Dr R G Birrell, a paediatrician, writing to the Australian Paediatric Journal notes that:106
The neonatal period provides the time for maximal risk of complication for this procedure.
He suggests that, if the procedure is to be done, delay until 12-15 months of age seems the only reasonable approach. Although infection is then less of a hazard, the risks of complications still remain very significant.107 Another paediatrician, Dr E Durham-Smith, suggests elective circumcision in the second or third year of life.108
Anaesthesia is required at this time, and the risks of this must be weighed against the advantages of circumcision.
He goes on to state that:109
Under the conditions pertaining in most neonatal nurseries, and especially the serious, albeit rare, complication of septicemia, routine circumcision in the neonatal period should not be performed; and in fact is undesirable at any time during the first year of life.
In babies, the prepuce protects the glans from urine and faeces and thus reduces the likelihood of infection.110
Neonatal circumcision is the only surgical operation routinely conducted without anaesthesia. Even local anaesthesia may lead to complications - mainly haematomas and local skin necrosis and occasionally death.111 The United States Task Force on Circumcision notes:112
Even a small dose of lidocaine can result in blood levels high enough to produce measurable systemic responses in neonates. Local anesthesia adds an element of risk ... Circumferential anesthesia may be hazardous.
It has been suggested that complications will arise in approximately 15 per cent of cases.113
The most serious complication is death. Although it is rare for babies to die as a result of circumcision, there are a number of reports of death. The Commission has been advised of a recent case in Queensland where an infant was being circumcised in a general practitioner's surgery. Because the child was exhibiting signs of discomfort, more than the recommended dose of local anaesthetic was applied. As a result of the overdoes of anaesthetic, the baby suffered a seizure and a cardiac arrest. The doctor did not have appropriate resuscitation equipment in his surgery. The baby was rushed to hospital but died shortly after.114
Gairdner referred to a United Kingdom mortality rate of 1.8 per 10,000 circumcisions.115
In a recent New York study, 500,000 circumcisions were completed without a death.116
A Western Australian study of four desperately ill newborns in Australia with bacterial meningitis from infected circumcision sites reported that two of the babies recovered, one survived with cerebral palsy and one died.117
Excessive skin of the penile shaft may be removed, resultingin concealed penis or a denuded shaft.118
The urethra may be caught in a circumcision clamp. This usually results in a fistula at the corona. It may be difficult to close the fistula. This may involve two separate procedures.119 The Commission has been advised of a recent case in Queensland where a child haemorrhaged after a circumcision operation performed in a general practitioner's surgery. The doctor stitched the wound and mistakenly stitched the urethra at the same time. The child was admitted to hospital a few days later, not having urinated during that time, gravely ill with septicaemia.120
The glans or even the penis may be amputated. There are reports of gangrene of the penis, avulsion of the scrotum and removal of needed skin for hypospadias repair.121
Asymmetrical or inadequate removal of the prepuce may result in an unsightly appearance - the frilly lizard look
. This is frequently the basis for a request for recircumcision.122
Bleeding may require a suture. If the suture is misplaced, it may result in a urethral fistula at the corona.
Haemorrhage, which may go undetected when nappies are used, has been the cause of death.123
May become infected.
Hirst reports:124
This is usually responsive to local treatment, but there are reports of progression on to the staphylococcal scalded syndrome, and in some cases, septicaemia occasionally leading to death of the infant.
Phimosis can occur as a direct result of inadequate circumcision rather than as a primary indication for the procedure. Hirst explains:125
The re-approximated line between the skin and the deep preputial layer heals by scarring and where an inadequate removal/ of the prepuce has been performed, contracture of the scar prevents retraction of the residual prepuce and hence a phimosis. Recircumcision is then required.
Hirst explains:126
Meatus and meatal stenosis may occur ... the intact foreskin protects the glans and meatus from the noxious effects of ammoniacal dermatitis [nappy rash]. In the absence of the prepuce, nappy rash
may affect the glans and particularly the meatus, causing meatitis. Healing produces narrowing of the orifice and resultant meatal stenosis. Meatal stenosis may cause a diminished or angulated stream, but rarely results in a bladder outlet obstruction. Meatal stenosis may require a definitive meatomy.
One Australian paediatrician describes a personal series of 5 proven cases of septicaemia in a 6 year period - 3 other cases of septicaemia in which the circumcision site was probably the portal entry of the bacterium, were also treated:127
In the 5 proven cases the organism cultured in the blood and on the infected site matched perfectly as to anabiotic sensitivities.
Two of these proven cases were gravely ill, and one child survived peripheral circulatory failure, pneumonia, pyonephrosis and 2 sites of osteomyelitis. From another babe 5 pathogens - proteus, strep. facealis, staph. aureus and 2 types of E. Coli were cultured from his circumcision site. The proteus caused the septicaemia in this later case. No deaths occurred in this series ofcases, but required intensive care.
Newborn circumcision is not paid by the National Health Service in Britain. In 1948 it was classified as cosmetic surgery and the rate ofcircumcision dropped to .5%.
In 1985 the Australian Federal Health Minister removed the rebate for circumcision from the Medical Benefits Schedule.129 The Minister suggested that circumcision rates should be reduced by education and community discussion. He expressed a fear of back-yard
circumcisions with a greater risk of fatality, trauma and infection.130
The financial cost of circumcision is difficult to calculate. In 1992/93 Medicare reimbursed patients $98,781 for circumcisions performed on infants less than 6 months of age. If the procedure is performed on a newborn prior to leaving the hospital after birth, there is unlikely to be a hospital bed charge. Medicare will pay 85% of the scheduled fee and here is no gap paid. Private health funds are prohibited from paying the gap in these cases because newborns are not considered patients under the Health Insurance Act 1973 (Cmth) unless in a neonatal intensive care unit.
If the child is returned to hospital after birth for circumcision, there will be a bed charge. Medicare will pay 75% of the scheduled fee and private funds may pick up the remaining 25%. For an infant under 6 months of age, the doctor's scheduled fee is $33.10 [significantly more for older children]. The Australian Medical Association recommends that doctors charge $57 for performing a circumcision on an infant under 6 monthsof age.
If the procedure is performed on a public patient in a public hospital there will be no additional hospital fee. If the procedure is performed as a private patient in a public hospital or on a private patient in a private hospital there will be additional charges which will vary from hospital to hospital. Queensland private hospitals charge up to $173 for bed fees or theatre fees MBF will pay up to $115 of hospital fees for memberswith top hospital cover.
The real cost to the community per infant (under 6 months of age will be in the vicinity of $175 (hospital) + $57 (doctor's fee) per procedure.
The common law operating in Queensland appears to be that if the young person is unable, through lack of maturity or other disability, to give effective consent to a proposed procedure and if the nature of the proposed treatment is invasive, irreversible and major surgery and for non-therapeutic purposes, then court approval is required before such treatment can pro- ceed. The court will not approve the treatment unless it is necessary and in the young person's best interests.132 The basis of this attitude is the respect which must be paid to an individual's bodily integrity.
Application can be made to the Family Court for approval of such treatment for young people. The extent of the Family Court's jurisdiction inthis regard has not been fully explored.
Types of treatment which are most likely within the Family Court's jurisdiction include sterilisation, the turning off of life support, transplantation of organs for the benefit of a sibling, and the like. Others are less clear. For example - an obstetrician seeking approval by the Court for a Caesarean section in cases where the young mother would not consent to the procedure, applications in relation to the performance of cardiac surgery on children where parental consent has been refused, and applications in relation to profoundly handicapped neonates. The Family Court has recently given its approval for a 14 year old child to undergo gender reassignment by the construction of male sexual organs.133 At birth, the child had been diagnosed as a female child with masculinisation of the genitalia. The child had undergone genital reconstruction to give her a feminine appearance but received inadequate hormone replacement treatment. Recurrent masculinisation of the child's physical structures had occurred with a charge in mental behaviour and attitude. The child wanted to undergo the reassignment procedure but in this case the Court held that the child was not mature enough to understand the nature and con- sequences of the procedure. As the procedure would require invasive, irreversible and major surgery, the child's parents could not consent - and Family Court approval was required.
Note:
If any surgical procedure to be performed on a child, whether `therapeutic' or `non-therapeutic' is not in the particular child's best interests, it cannot proceed. Further, if the procedure is performed in an unskilled manner the person performing the procedure may be criminally as well as civilly liable for the consequences, irrespective of the validity of the consent obtained prior to the procedure.
Unless there are immediate health benefits to a particular child from circumcision, it is unlikely that the procedure itself could be considered as therapeutic.
Whether the procedure is within the best interests of any particular child will depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. For example, adherence to the religious and cultural beliefs and practices of the child's community could be seen as being within the child's best interests. This view may vary according to he likelihood of the child wanting to continue to adhere to such beliefs and practices when of an age that he can decide for himself the type of life he wishes to lead.
The circumcision procedure is invasive, irreversible and major. It involves the removal of an otherwise healthy organ part. It has seriousattendant risks.
As a prophylactic measure, circumcision of neonates does not appear to be the least restrictive alternative. For a number of the adverse health conditions which have been associated with non-circumcised penises, the least restrictive preventative measure would be education of children in genital hygiene and in responsible, safe sexual practices. Circumcision as a prophylactic procedure may be appropriate for older males who have the capacity to consent to the procedure.
On a strict interpretation of the assault provisions of the Queensland Criminal Code, routine circumcision of a male infant could be regarded as a criminal act. Further, consent by parents to the procedure being performed may be invalid in light of the common law's restrictions on the ability of parents to consentto the non-therapeutic treatment of children.
Although practices such as circumcision involve an infringement of the bodily integrity of the child, it is likely that the State will only intervene through criminal and child welfare laws when the harm of the infringement outweighs the benefit that the child would receive from acceptance within a cultural or religious group of which the child and the child's family are an integral part.
Although male circumcision is not now generally encouraged for medical reasons in the light of modern medical and scientific knowledge,134 there is an argument that it should not be made unlawful because the harm to the child involved may be outweighed by the benefits to the child of being accepted into this cultural or religious group. Whether routine circumcision for non-religious reasons and non-cultural reasons is in the child's best interests may be unclear. However, because of the fairly widespread community acceptance of the procedure it is unlikely, at this time, that a prohibition on routine neonatal male circumcision would be universally supported. It is also unlikely at this time that a medical practitioner acting in good faith and with due care and skill would be prosecuted for assault for performing a circumcision on a male infant.
It is less clear whether a child could sue the doctor for damages for assault under the civil law.135 The child's ability to sue would not be dependent upon the criminality of the doctor's actions. It would however be dependent upon the absence of real consent. It could be argued that because the circumcision of a particular child was not in that child's best interests, the parents could not have given real consent to it taking place. It could also be argued that, without adequate information being provided to the parents prior to the procedure taking place on the nature and possible consequences of the procedure, consent by the parents was not real
consent.
It may be reasonable to require, either by law or by a professional Code of Practice, medical practitioners to inform parents of all arguments for and against circumcision before, and possibly at least a number of days before, undertaking the procedure. A statutory consent form containing information on arguments for and against circumcision could be drafted. The form should be regularly updated with new information.
It might be reasonable to require that all circumcisions be performed by medical practitioners or other experienced and skilled people in circumstances which reduce to a minimum any adverse consequences.136
12 -- As many as desire to make a fair shew in the flesh, they constrain you to be circumcised; only lest they should suffer persecution for the cross of Christ.
13 -- For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the law; but desire to have you circumcised that they may glory in your flesh.
14 -- But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world.
15 -- For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new creature.
16 -- And as many as walk according to this rule, peace be on them, and mercy, and upon the Israel of God.
Circumcision is neither required nor prohibited by the Salvation Army; it is a matter for parents to decide. Circumcision is not under taken as a religious ritual ....
~ Read H. The Salvation Army Viewpoint. Australian Family Physician Vol 15 No 3 May 1986 at 574.
No great importance is attached to this in Christian tradition. Reasons such as hygiene justify its use.
~ Manning KM. A Catholic Viewpoint. Australian Family Physician Vol 15 No 4 April 1986 493 at 496.
While circumcision was mandatory for Israelite males, it is not seen as applying to Christians but couples may have their child circumcised if they wish.
~ McClean D. Jehovah's Witnesses. Australian Family Physician Vol 15 No 6 June 1986 772.
Generally [circumcision] is opposed by the Church but accepted if a medical practitioner decides it is for the patient's benefit.
~ Baliozian A. Armenian Church. Australian Family Physician Vol 15 No 8 August 1986 1024.
Few members, if any, would have objection to ... circumcision although there is no stated policy on these things.
~ Ewers GA. Churches of Christ. Australian Family Physician Vol 15 No 8 August 1986 1024.
Circumcision and the like constitute individual issues in Christian ethics and cannot be answered a priori, that is to say, without bearing in mind the person they relate to.
~ Archbishop Styllanos. Greek Orthodox. Australian Family Physician Vol 15 No 8 August 1986 1024-1025.
Conscientious Objection is a right to refuse to participate where the refusal is based on beliefs about that which is right or wrong to do, and where the belief of personal conscience is the dominant guide to the individual's decision. Fear, personal convenience or preference are not sufficient basis for conscientious objection.
muzzled.
Surely this shows the need for proper education of those members of the medical profession most closely associated with these problems.
Should I have him circumcised?Patient Management, November 1990: 15, at 16.
Should I have him circumcised? Patient Management, November 1970:339, at 340.
Should I have him circumcised?Patient Management, November 1990: 15, at 16 notes that in adults, if a catheter is passed and the patient subsequently develops a urinary infection, the organism is usually identical to that found on the culture of the urethral meatus or preputial sac at the time the catheter is passed.
There is support, therefore, for the belief that infections arise from the ascending route.
glanson top of the penis from the irritation of wet nappies and reduces the likelihood of infection. A circumcised baby is more likely to develop problems because he lacks this protection.
A young couple took their normal, identical twin boys to a physician to be circumcised when the boys were seven months old. The physician in the operating theatre used an electric cauterizing needle to remove the foreskin of one twin. When the baby's foreskin didn't give on the first try or on the second, the doctor increased the current. On the third attempt the surge of heat from the electricity literally cooked the baby's penis. Unable to heal, the penis dried up and in a few days sloughed off completely, like the stub of an umbilical cord. At the age of twenty-one months the little girl
was brought back to the John Hopkins Hospital for surgical feminization and removal of testes. Her mother has reported that dolls and a doll carriage headed her Christmas list when she was five and that, quite unlike her brother, the girl was neat and dainty, experimented happily with styles of her long hair, and often tried to help in the kitchen. Finger pressure applied above the urethral opening ensured a downward urine stream. Vaginoplasty and hormone replacement were planned at puberty but the girl was not ready to accept hospitalization.
The glans or even the penis itself may be amputated. Reanastomosis should be attempted using microsurgical techniques which have been successful. ... Cautery also has burned the penis completely when applied to circumcision clamps. These complications can be terrible and usually are the result of use of a circumcision clamp by inexperienced operators. Freehand techniques are much preferred by the occasional operator ... Fortunately new microsurgical techniques allow construction of a missing penis from revascularized and reinnervated grafts. These patients eventually can be outfitted with a penile prosthesis for erection, permitting intercourse. However, the nerve endings of the glans cannot be replaced. Obviously boys who lose the penis in infancy should continue to be reared and reconstructed as girls.
nappie. This predisposes to meatal ulceration, and often significant stenosis when the healing is complete.
The Council having considered the opinion of the Australian College of Paediatrics and the Health Commission of N.S.W., was of the opinion that there is no medical indication for undertaking routine circumcision on newborn male infants, and that hazards of the operation at this age outweigh any possible advantages.
In this context the Council requested that the Medical Benefits Schedule Revision Committee be asked to consider whether routine neonatal circumcision should be removed from the Medical Benefits Schedule.The Circumcision Information and Resource Pages are a not-for-profit educational resource and library. IntactiWiki hosts this website but is not responsible for the content of this site. CIRP makes documents available without charge, for informational purposes only. The contents of this site are not intended to replace the professional medical or legal advice of a licensed practitioner.
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