The Other Face of Circumcision in HIV War
By Michael Bahinyoza
The Geneva-based World Health Organisation has
reportedly, over the last couple of months been leading
UN Agencies (UNAIDS, UNICEF, UNFPA)
to support particularly African countries to develop
male circumcision policies and strategies in the
broader/ comprehensive HIV prevention strategy.
This follows results from the three Randomised
Controlled Trials (RCTs) undertaken in Kisumu (Kenya),
Rakai (Uganda) and Orange Farm (South Africa) showing
that male circumcision could reduce the risk of
heterosexually acquired HIV infection in men by about
60 per cent.
According to media reports, Rwanda has already rolled
out male circumcision in the military, a country where
ironically, circumcised men have a higher rate of HIV
than 'intact' men. (www.circumcisionandHIV.com).
A colleague told me last week, seven of his friends
(all of them single) had been circumcised in this ended
month of July and that the RCT findings had majorly
influenced their decision. It is worth noting that
because of information deficiency and other challenges,
there have been a number of exaggerated claims made for
the reported efficacy of male circumcision in
preventing HIV infection.
Many people are not even aware that the results from
the above mentioned Randomised Controlled Trials are
about prevention of female-to-male HIV infection.
Secondly, not many young people (and probably adults
as well) seem aware that the trial results clearly
indicate that male circumcision reduces the risk of
infection. Unfortunately, many young male adolescents
and some men prefer reading or hearing reducing the
risk as eliminating the risk.
Undoubtedly, there is 'a heaven of difference' between
risk reduction and risk elimination and hopefully, this
can be well grasped in the preventive campaign against
HIV/Aids.
Reputable senior research fellows, Garry Dowsett and
Murray Coach, from Australia suggest in their findings; "The use of male
circumcision in preventing HIV infection" that the
results of the three RCTs contain exaggerated claims.
In his work; "The Demonisation of the Foreskin and the
Rise of Circumcision in Britain," Darby RJL, too,
brings to the fore what he considers information that
the respective supervisors of the three RCTs should not
have ignored.
Apparently it turns out that all the three RCTs were
terminated early, arguably before the incidence of HIV
infection in the circumcised males caught up with the
incidence of infection in the non-circumcised
males.
It is therefore highly probable that non-circumcised
males got infected more quickly than their circumcised
friends because the circumcised males required a period
of abstinence after circumcision, suggesting, among
other things, likely that if the studies had continued
as initially scheduled, the difference in infection
incidence between the two groups of males would have
been small.
As has been noted by our own Ministry of Health, male
circumcision does not protect women. Since viral load is the cardinal predictor
of the risk of HIV transmission, male circumcision
would not reduce the viral load and thus infectivity to
the female partner.
For now, it may be wise for our own Ministry of
Health, the medical fraternity and the public to be
cautious and not to be overwhelmed by the 'hyperbolic' promotion of male
circumcision in HIV prevention.
Pre-marital chastity and fidelity, nurtured and
supported by needed life skills within viable and
dynamic support groups, remain time-tested HIV/AIDS
preventive weaponry as the infected and affected are
given needed care and support.
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