Child Circumcision: An Elephant in the Hospital

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Uploaded by on Jul 8, 2011

Visit Ryan's site here: http://www.notjustskin.org

This video is also available here: http://vimeo.com/26130057

What is infant circumcision? Why is the practice common in U.S. hospitals and not in other countries? What does it remove and how does that affect the child? Does scientific data suggest that circumcision has benefits? What are the potential complications? How does it affect sexuality? Is it a medical procedure or a social surgery? If it's unnecessary surgery, what about contemporary bioethics principles?

Through both a review of scientific literature and a discussion of the human cost of the procedure, this presentation explores these questions from the perspectives of the child, the adult survivor, the parent, and the practitioner.

Ryan McAllister, PhD, is a parent, a biophysicist, an Assistant Professor of Physics and Oncology at Georgetown University, and also a volunteer who supports parents and families. Over the last 10 years he has been studying the medicalization of childbirth in U.S. hospitals.

The slides, supplementary material, references and a copy of the video can be downloaded here:
http://physics.georgetown.edu/~rmca/Elephant_in_the_Hospital/

NOTE: This presentation includes some graphic slides necessary to present the procedure and anatomy being discussed.

Today, most Americans think of circumcision as natural procedure for male babies. Neonatal circumcision is the most common operation carried out in the U.S. today. Nationally, rates are as high as 60%, down from a peak of 75% in the 1970s. But when compared to the rest of the English speaking world, America is unique. Great Britain, Canada and Australia have current rates of male circumcision at about 15%, whereas New Zealand is lower than 5%. In the US, the rate differs by regionally, with high rates of circumcision in the white South, but low circumcision rates among babies of Hispanic origin. Most of the rest of the Western world has retained the abhorrence of male circumcision that has existed in Europe since the time of the ancient Greeks (and as noted in the last post, some in 18th century England feared Jewish emancipation meant universal circumcision!). What happened in the US that made the procedure so popular?

There are a number of reasons that brough circumcision to prominence in America in the early 20th century.

1. Stop Masturbation! Advocates were aided by the puritanical moral sentiment of the day, as circumcision was promoted as a way to discourage masturbation. (Modern surveys have actually shown the opposite to be true.)

2. Circumcision as a cure for maladies. In 1870, Dr. Lewis Sayre of New York (and vice president of the newly-formed American Medical Association), examined a boy who was unable to straighten his legs and whose condition had so far defied regular treatment. Upon noting that the boys genitals were inflamed, Sayre hypothesized that chronic irritation of the boys foreskin had paralyzed his knees via reflex neurosis. Sayre circumcised the boy, and within a few weeks he recovered from his paralysis. After additional positive results, Sayre began to promote circumcision as an orthopedic remedy, and his prominence within the medical profession and the newly formed AMA allowed him to reach a wide audience. Over the next decades, the list of ailments reputed to be treatable through circumcision grew to include hernia, bladder infections, kidney stones, insomnia, rheumatism, epilepsy, asthma, erectile dysfunction, syphilis, insanity, and a handful of other syndromes.

3. Hospitals. Compounded by cause no. 1, as hospitals proliferated in urban areas, more children were under the care of physicians in hospitals rather than with midwives in the home. Some historians have even theorized that circumcision became a class marker of those wealthy enough to afford a hospital birth.

4. Easier Surgical Procedures. The discovery in 1885 of hypodermic cocaine as a local anaesthetic made it easier for doctors without expertise in the use of chloroform to perform minor surgeries. Several mechanically-aided circumcision techniques, forerunners of modern clamp-based circumcision methods, were first published in the medical literature of the 1890s, allowing surgeons to perform circumcisions more safely and successfully.

Circumcision was at a statistical height of about 75% of the country from 1950 to 1970. Today it is becoming less popular, partially because of high numbers of Hispanic immigrants, and growing opposition in the more progressive northeast and west (it remains overwhelmingly common in the South). Today, the major medical societies in the USA do not recommend routine non-therapeutic infant circumcision. This has long also been the case in the rest of the English speaking world, which has never seen circumcision rates as high as the United States.

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  • Tremendously informative lecture. The pictures and video were almost too much for a nurturing mom to watch. I cried through the video. So grateful that I researched and my husband listened to me so that when our second child was born and we found out he was a boy we knew what we would NOT do to him. Thankfully, neither my ob or our pediatrician performed circumcisions anyway. Hearing them make that statement was definitely confirmation from the professionals we had hired.

  • @MacHead31, male and female foreskin are homologous structures, as you imply. The male foreskin has a much more dynamic function in sex, which is why circumcising the male foreskin is more detrimental to sex than circumcising the female foreskin.

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All Comments (528)

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  • @Pastor9764 Well, they're the grandparents. I want them to be part of my children's lives. How am I going to explain mysteriously not letting them change a grandson's diapers? "No no you can't do that"? Would be massively fishy. So when they change his diapers, well, they'll see he isn't cut. So then the conversation starts. I'd rather it just be upfront: "This is our choice. Please respect it." Put in those terms, I know that though they might be disgruntled, they'll let it be.

  • @EARL131141 falsely believed. I'm sorry the conversation was so unproductive... it's possible she became defensive / is afraid that you blame her or carry anger. The best thing to do is be up front and tell her it's ok (or, if you do feel anger, express it calmly and without venom). Clearing the air may help.

  • @nfinn42 How is it any of your parents' business? Why even tell them?

  • @RavenousSky: Me neither. I could never. It's the doctors who I'm really angry at.

    @rfinn42: I understand how you feel! I talked to my mom about it by coincidence, and she didn't say anything about how I felt. She just defended circumcision because it's believed to protect against HIV, then tried to change the subject.

  • @thesirenrayne I doubt they'd listen.

  • @EARL131141 I feel the same. I dread the day my fiancee and I have a child; if it's a son, that is.  Not because I dread the decision - she and I are firmly anti-circ. I dread explaining it to my parents. They're smart enough to realize that if I'm anti-circ, then I must not appreciate their having had it done to me. Prob gonna be a bit awkward. :\

  • @EARL131141 No, I am not really angry at my parents, more so the doctors who make half a Billion dollars off this industry of cutting children... even though I could never do something like that to anyone I love.

  • @RavenousSky: My sentiments exactly, but the thing is: I forgive my parents because they have been deceived, as most parents are. I'm not nearly as angry at my parents as I am at the doctors and nurses who pushed this in my parents' faces and did this to me without my consent.

  • @RavenousSky Sorry man but don't let get you down. Know that you saved your son and are a better person than both of your parents.

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