Parents reconsider routine circumcision
BY CHRISTINE FACCIOLO | GANNETT NEWS SERVICE
When Sarah Altemus was expecting her first child,
she had an important decision to make: Whether the baby
should be circumcised if it was a boy.
For months, she and her husband grappled with the pros
and cons before they decided to have their son
circumcised.
"His father is circumcised, so we wanted him to look
like his father," says Altemus, 27, of Jennersville,
Pa. "Also, we knew friends who didn't circumcise their
son and he felt so different from everyone else that he
decided to have it done when he was in his
teens."
Circumcision used to be a routine step in the birthing
process, much like cutting the umbilical cord.
Advocates of the procedure point to research showing
that circumcision lowers the risk of developing urinary
tract infections and sexually transmitted diseases
including AIDS.
But foes of removing the penis foreskin argue that the
procedure provides minimal benefits, causes extreme
pain and produces long-term psychological and sexual
trauma.
"Circumcision violates every major tenet of medical
practice, which is 'First, do no harm.' And secondly,
modern medical ethics say parents do not have the right
to ask for a medical procedure that is not in the best
interest of their children," says Dr. Mark D. Reiss,
retired physician and executive director of Doctors Opposing Circumcision in
Seattle.
The American Academy of Pediatrics has
maintained a fairly neutral policy
since 1999, saying that while circumcision has some
potential health benefits associated with it, the
procedure isn't medically necessary. Since then,
Medicaid programs in 16 states have stopped covering
circumcisions.
Experts believe that the warm, moist area under the
foreskin may be a breeding ground for infections,
though they point out that lifestyle and hygiene have
the biggest impact on health.
"These studies have generated enough thought and
concern for us to say we need to go back and review our
policy and to do that earlier than we had planned,"
says Dr. Jay Berkelhamer, president of the pediatrics
academy.
Despite the lack of a clear medical mandate, the
United States leads the world in circumcisions,
although the numbers are trending downward. Thirty
years ago, 90 percent of American newborn boys were
circumcised. Currently, around 60 percent undergo the
procedure, according to 1999 data from the National
Hospital Discharge Survey. Worldwide, 85 percent of
males are uncircumcised.
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