August
21
  5:45:21 PM

Dutch doctors told to discourage male circumcision

A clear North/South divide is emerging in attitudes towards male circumcision. In May the Dutch Royal Medical Association became the first national medical group to declare that the procedure is both medically unnecessary and an abuse of the rights of the child, in the same way as female circumcision, or female genital mutilation.

However, the Dutch have decided to actively discourage circumcision rather than to ban it, as that could drive the procedure underground. About 15,000 boys are circumcised each year.

On the other hand African countries are actively encouraging circumcision because trials in 2007 in Kenya, Uganda and South Africa showed that it dramatically reduced the risk of infection with HIV/AIDS. According to a report in the BMJ, 14 countries in southern Africa are promoting circumcision with radio and television campaigns.

In Swaziland, where HIV prevalence is 45%. circumcision is even regarded as “crucial to the survival of… click here to read whole article and make comments




 

 Search BioEdge

 Subscribe to BioEdge newsletter
rss Subscribe to BioEdge RSS feed

 from the editor: Pointed Remarks
Do we need a morality pill?
4 Feb 2012
Should we scrap the dead donor rule?
28 Jan 2012
The bioethics of intellectual disability
21 Jan 2012

 Be a fan of BioEdge on Facebook

 Best of the web

 Recent Posts
Neuroscience as the military’s new weapon
9 Feb 2012
Single-embryo transfers? Fugedaboudit, says NY IVF doctor
9 Feb 2012
Dutch celebrate a decade of euthanasia with a film festival
6 Feb 2012
Lost in surrogacy’s Bermuda Triangle
3 Feb 2012
Scores of UK patients die with bedsores, infections and malnutrition
3 Feb 2012

 Tags
embryonic stem cells, Canada, UK, China, Australia, neuroscience, law, US, HFEA, suicide, sperm donation, animal rights, organ trafficking, commercialization, bioethics, informed consent, assisted suicide, Netherlands, research, Down syndrome, genetic testing, IVF, euthanasia, abortion, organ donation, human drama, clinical trials, India, stem cells, surrogacy,