Finnish hospitals
urged to perform circumcisions
Legislation under preparation at Ministry of Social
Affairs and Health
- Finnish university hospitals have received
instructions from the Ministry of Social Affairs and
Health and the Association of Finnish Local and
Regional Authorities, urging public health care
facilities to provide circumcisions for boys whose
families want the procedure.
-
- The purpose of the move is to avert complications
that might result from religiously mandated
circumcisions performed by untrained people, which
often involve poor hygiene and inadequate
anaesthesia.
- The letter was sent
- because Finland currently has no legislation on
circumcisions. Now a bill on the procedure is under
preparation at the Ministry of Social Affairs and
Health.
-
- Ministry official Marja-Liisa Partanen
says that the issue will be examined while the
present minister is still in office, before a new
government takes over.
-
- "Probably a small law will be passed on this
issue, because it is difficult to link this with our
law on public health. After all, this is not a
question of actual health care", Partanen says.
- The problem is not
- a very extensive one. There are no precise
figures on the number of circumcisions performed on
boys in Finland, but Partanen estimates that it might
be about 100 a year.
-
- All religious-based circumcisions performed in
hospitals are for Muslims. Finland's Jewish community
has its own specialists who perform the procedure
under hygienic conditions.
-
- The basis of the letter and the legislative
preparations is an incident in
Kuopio in 2001 when an African-born doctor performed
circumcisions on seven boys at home, several of whom
were later hospitalised for complications. The
criminal investigation in the case is expected to be
completed next week.
-
- The case could set a
precedent as to whether such circumcisions constitute
assault.
-
- The letter sent to hospitals urges doctors to
perform circumcisions on patients who ask for one.
The purpose is to avoid complications that might
result from procedures performed in the home.
-
- According to Ritva Larjomaa of the
Association of Finnish Local and Regional
Authorities, a doctor with
ethical objections to performing circumcisions cannot
be forced to do it.
-
- As the procedure is not a
medical one, some doctors have refused to perform it,
saying that it violates the physical integrity of the
child. Larjomaa says that on the same basis a
church minister might refuse to baptise a child.
-
- "We should also not create a situation in which
public health care does not operate, but the private
sector does", Larjomaa emphasises.
- Circumcision patients
- must queue for the procedure just like all
patients needing minor surgery. The price of the
procedure is the same as for all types of day surgery
provided by hospitals: slightly more than 100 euros.
After the operation the patient can go straight
home.
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