Action, not intent, indicates what you believe.

This comment follows a discussion on the ongoing case in Oregon in which a father wants to circumcise his 12-year-old son in conjunction with his own conversion to Judaism (previous entry here):

That’s CRAZY! I think I’ll get any son of mine circumcised at birth, but mostly because uncircumcised [sic] penises look funny. A baby just think [sic] to himself goo goo goo ga ga- OW!FUCKSHITOW! goo goo ga, where I think the 12 year old might hate his dad forever for an incredibly painful experience.

…but on the other hand, as long as you don’t beat your children with an electric cord, they’re pretty much your property as far as the law is concerned.

Sadly, this isn’t too far out of the common thought process people offer when imagining that infant circumcision is less problematic than waiting because they can’t grasp the reality that it would probably never be necessary.

The commenter thinks a normal, intact penis looks “funny”. This is a permitted excuse in the United States for removing a healthy, normal part of a boy’s genitals. This moves beyond irrational, into immoral. Changing normal to common does not qualify as medical need.

At least the commenter realizes that circumcision hurts the child. But why isn’t that enough to lead to the only correct decision? The infant will not remember the surgery, but that’s hardly a justification. Any number of unnecessary interventions could be performed if that low criteria commands any respect. Also note the assumption that the 12-year-old could object, but his objection doesn’t warrant an injunction against the surgery.

Finally, why is it acceptable for the law to treat children as parental property? Individuals have inherent rights not to be harmed, which is why we do not permit abuse with an electrical cord. Proxy consent is reasonable, but anything short of medical need does not protect the child’s rights. Being inherent, there is no minimum age at which those basic rights vest to the child, if we’re being ethical.

Unfortunately, we are not being ethical. We allow parents to circumcise male minors for any and every reason, including the shallow, subjective belief that the normal, intact penis looks funny. The law – incorrectly – permits parents to treat their children as property. That does not mean that parents should choose that option.

Reason is quite informative.

The Blowfish Blog makes several excellent points while discussing circumcision. (Link/site probably NSFW by most office standards.) While I reject any notion that something other than immediate medical need justifies child circumcision (whether religious, cultural, or potential benefits), I particularly like that the author, Rebekah Skoor, has the sense to write this:

I’ve always been a fan of waiting until my kids were old enough to make their own bodily decisions before asking if they wanted to get circumcised. I ran this idea by the boys and they looked aghast, as if I had just taken away their new Prada shoes and replaced them with Tevas. “Oh HELL no!” they shrieked. Apparently no one in their right mind would volunteer for a circumcision when they were old enough to remember it.

Isn’t that telling parents something, though? If you won’t submit your penis to Mr. Knife when you are old enough to remember it, wouldn’t it reason that these babies are lying in their cribs thinking, “Just what the hell do you think you are gonna do with THAT?”

Of course babies don’t want unnecessary circumcision. And all evidence demonstrates that the overwhelming majority of men left intact never choose (or need) circumcision. Logic and data suggest only one course of non-action.

Contrast that with the interviewer who couldn’t reason through a question about a choice unbiased by having been surgically altered at birth with unnecessary circumcision.

Effective HIV prevention does not involve distorting facts.

I saw this Richard Holbrooke essay on HIV when it appeared a few weeks ago. Nothing in it warranted¹ specific comment from a circumcision perspective that hasn’t been said repeatedly. This is all he offered:

A viable prevention strategy would encompass education and counseling, free condoms, female empowerment, more male circumcision, and abstinence.

Implement four of those five suggestions and number four becomes irrelevant. Or, if you’re in an intelligent mood, replace more male circumcision with more personal responsibility. Life has consequences, even with circumcision. (At the very least, insert voluntary adult between more and male.)

Today, thanks to Daniel Halperin and his essay in today’s Washington Post, I must reference Mr. Holbrooke. Halperin opens with praise for Holbrooke’s stance that we need to reduce the number of new infections before we can suggest any progress. Fair enough, with quibbles, but it’s stunning how quickly Halperin will abandon the logic he demonstrates here:

The most rigorous study yet conducted, a randomized trial from Zimbabwe published last month in the journal AIDS, found an increased rate of HIV after people underwent testing and counseling compared with those who did not, though the increase was not quite statistically significant. The London-based researchers noted that some other studies similarly have found “disinhibition,” or a worsening of behavior, among people who learned they were not infected. While it might seem intuitive that knowing one’s HIV status and, ideally, receiving good counseling would lead to behavior change and reduced risk, the real-world evidence for this conventional wisdom is still unclear, especially for the large majority who test negative.

With what other strategy might disinhibition be a problem?

As Holbrooke noted, circumcision has indisputably been proven to prevent HIV. It reduces the risk of male infection during intercourse by at least 60 percent and, unlike a condom, cannot be forgotten during a moment of passion. Nearly all of 15 studies conducted throughout Africa found that most uncircumcised [sic] men would want the service if it were affordable and safe, and even more women prefer it for their partners and children.

Holbrooke did not state in his essay that circumcision prevents HIV. If he had he’d be spreading untruths, but he chose not to, speaking of ways to reduce the transmission. To be fair, I suspect prevent is a fill-in as a less awkward way for Halperin to say reduced risk. This distinction is important, though, because prevent has stronger implications. Only abstinence prevents sexually-transmitted HIV. Because there are lives involved, this topic deserves more care with words.

It appears – not indisputably, when looking at all data – that (voluntary adult) male circumcision reduces the risk of female-to-male² transmission by up to 60 percent³, not at least. Why the distortion, if not to promote a preferred solution?

Returning to the potential problem of disinhibition in HIV, the real-world consequences of our actions should never be dismissed as a factor the way they are in the circumcision debate. But circumcision advocates already dismiss that in their rush to portray adult males as too irresponsible, so better to address Halperin’s statement in his own context. A condom can be forgotten. True. But it can also be intentionally abandoned because (voluntary adult) male circumcision “prevents” HIV. (See how important words can be in this topic?) Could that possibly lead to disinhibition? Does Halperin believe that circumcised men can engage in unprotected sex and not become HIV infected if they skip a condom only once?

Time to revisit Halperin’s next sentence and put the emphasis where it should be:

Nearly all of 15 studies conducted throughout Africa found that most uncircumcised [sic] men would want the service…

Which studies contradict the belief that men want circumcision? Of those men who do not want it, is it reasonable to assume that some of the infants now being circumcised would not want it?

Remind me again how only people who believe that males (and females) should be protected from medically unnecessary surgery are passionate – in the frothy, derogatory sense – about circumcision. Lying and selective omission of data are the actions of a passionate circumcision advocate.

¹ Also from the Holbrooke essay:

… Anthony Fauci, the famed director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, has stated the case in dramatic terms. Speaking in July at an international conference, Fauci said: “For every one person that you put in therapy, six new people get infected. So we’re losing that game.” He went on to say, “Clearly, prevention must be addressed in a very forceful way.”

Draw from that what you will, but the evidence suggests what kind of force too many people prefer to “prevent” HIV.

² Notice how Halperin wrote “male infection”, not “female-to-male infection”. The latter is correct, as no study has shown that (voluntary adult) male circumcision reduces male-to-male infection. He’s speaking of Africa, where heterosexual transmission appears to be the primary route of infection, but public health advocates like Halperin are rather quick to justify routine infant circumcision for potential benefits it has not been demonstrated to potentially offer. Unfortunately, male-to-male is the primary transmission method in the United States, not female-to-male. But promoting circumcision conforms to our cultural obsession, so it allegedly passes such semantic omissions.

³ The reduction in risk appears to be up to 60 percent when studies on long-term transmission risk are ended early. There is a lag between infection and testing positive. This period is also the most infectious for HIV transmission. Halperin acknowledges this. Might this matter, especially in light of disinhibition?

More choices exist beyond “Now” and “Later”.

From the initial premise, this article on circumcision from The Boston Globe is flawed. The title is “Disputing the need for circumcision”, which implies that the onus to justify a position is on those who understand that males are (almost always) born with healthy genitals; surgery is not indicated.

The discussion should be over. But it’s not. Our culture is irrational enough to believe that a circumcised penis is normal and a normal penis is weird. We’re stuck with a psychologist, Ronald Goldman, defending sanity rather than a circumcision proponent trying to defend insanity. Typical.

The article opens with a passage from the Book of Genesis. I’m unimpressed, for multiple reasons.

The interviewer descends further into the ridiculous throughout his interview with Dr. Goldman. Specifically, this tired nonsense, begun with an intelligent rebuttal from Dr. Goldman based on ethics:

Would you want someone else to make the decision . . . or would you want to reserve that choice for yourself.

Q. I’d prefer them to make that decision when I was an infant than for me to make it at the age of majority, when it would be many times more painful.

Spoken with the ignorance of hindsight exhibited by most circumcised men, to which I’ll just ask questions, in no particular order:

  • How much evidence do we have from infants that circumcision pain is acceptable to them?
  • How do we know it would be many times more painful as an adult?
  • What’s the difference between the pain management (not always) given to infants and the pain management available to adults?
  • What’s the difference between the circumciser’s ability to judge how much skin to remove from an infant versus an adult?
  • Does the adult’s ability to offer his input into that estimation matter?
  • Is it relevant that intact adults almost never choose or need circumcision?
  • Do similarities in the rates of disease (allegedly, in many cases) related to the penis/foreskin and the lack of similarities in rates of circumcision between America and Europe indicate anything significant?

At the end, the interviewer asks Dr. Goldman a curious question:

Q. Are you circumcised? How did you get so passionate about it?

I’d ask the interviewer how he got so indifferent about imposing medically unnecessary surgery on a boy’s healthy, normal genitals.

I wish to include the possibility that the interviewer is not indifferent. The belief that parents may impose medically unnecessary surgery on their boy’s healthy, normal genitals is a passionate stance in defense of routine infant circumcision, whether it’s acknowledged as such. So, to the interviewer: how did he get so passionate about circumcision?

Measuring twice will still prove inaccurate until adulthood.

From the “Ask Anyone” advice column from Buffalo’s ArtVoice:

I just found out that I’m pregnant, with a boy. I don’t believe in circumcision, but my husband does, and so do our families. If I refuse to circumcise him, will he end up psychologically scarred for life? Do my wishes trump my husband’s here, or do we have to decide 50-50? —Occam’s Razor

Based on my experience of visiting Buffalo, Danielle’s hometown, I don’t imagine there’s much support for common sense on circumcision. Yet, I’m generally pleased with the answer. The condensed version of the response:

The Gay Perspective: …
… Don’t cave in to pressure. Having an uncut [sic] penis will not scar him for life. Circumcising him might.

Exactly.

Additionally, although the reader’s question involved psychological scarring, every circumcision causes physical scarring. That must not be ignored, especially because most people choose this medically unnecessary surgery for “aesthetics”. Lunacy.

Information further in the article makes me wish I could numb my forehead so that I could bash it into my desk:

The Sales Guy says: … a good friend of mine is—how do you say?—unsnipped [ed. note: The correct word is intact (i.e. normal).], as it were. He swears if he had a say he would have preferred circumcision early on. The reason being a certain mild sexually contracted infection turned unusually problematic because of the “ turtleneck”—it lasted far longer and was more painful than it otherwise might have been. So take that into consideration.

With all due respect¹, this man’s foreskin has nothing to do with his troubles. He did not contract his mild STD because his parents did not subject him to unnecessary surgery. He contracted it because he had unprotected sex with an infected partner. Don’t be irresponsible enough to contract the STD and protracted recovery will not be an issue. Condoms. Duh.

I will never understand why so many people avoid critical thinking on this.

¹ None is warranted for this individual’s conclusion.

Acknowledging risks would be a nice change.

This story is making the rounds today:

Nearly 19,000 people died in the United States in 2005 after being infected with virulent drug-resistant bacteria that have spread rampantly through hospitals and nursing homes, according to the most thorough study of the disease’s prevalence ever conducted.

The study also concluded that 85 percent of invasive [methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus] infections are associated with health care treatment. Previous research had indicated that many hospitals and long-term care centers had become breeding grounds for MRSA because bacteria could be transported from patient to patient by doctors, nurses and unsterilized equipment.

I wrote about a study involving MRSA two years ago that highlighted the frequency with which newborn males become infected. From that article:

They defined as previously healthy any child who had no hospitalizations other than at birth, and no surgery other than circumcision.

Infants die from infection as a result of circumcision, whether it’s MRSA or something else. They should be included in any study. Because they have invasive surgery imposed on them unnecessarily, they should probably be moved to the beginning of the analysis.

To be fair, I do not know which infection killed the boy in Canada in April. The news reports only indicated infection. In the end, it doesn’t matter. Circumcision is surgery. It is almost always performed on a completely healthy child boy. The risks are inherent, immediate, and unavoidable. No potential benefits – medical or cultural – can overcome that basic fact for a healthy child.

Bonus: Megan McArdle has an interesting take on MRSA and national health care here.

The process of getting it shows why it will fail to deliver utopia.

Medpundit offers a concise summary of the fallacy that U.S. universal health care/coverage will mimic other established universal systems. It also explains why I don’t believe that universal health care/insurance will lead to the end of routine infant circumcision in America. (I removed the links from this excerpt because they make it appear too busy, but they’re worth reviewing at the original entry. Emphasis here is in original text.)

The British are often held up as the standard to which we should aspire. But we don’t live under a British style of government. We live under a government that’s truly government of the people, by the people, for the people. And what the people want, the people get. Witness the influence of disease activism even now on disease specific government funding and treatment mandates. In England, the government only pays for colonoscopies to check for colon cancer if there are symptoms suggestive of cancer or a family history of colon cancer. In the United States, the Medicare pays for a colonoscopy every ten years for everyone over 50, regardless of symptoms or risk. So do many insurance companies., sometimes if not by choice, by mandate. In England, mammograms are only covered for women between the ages of 50 and 70, and then only every three years. In the United States, we pay for mammograms beginning at age 40, yearly, and with no upper age limit. We just don’t have the heart for rationing that they have in other countries.

It’s possible, probable even, that universal coverage would reduce the number of unnecessary circumcisions performed as compared to our quasi-private system now. However, I suspect the decrease will be neither significant nor long-lasting. The fundamental flaw in populism is that it can’t say “no” if a majority demand a “yes”. Principles and rules do not matter. The rights of the minority do not matter.

In this particular procedure, the opinion of the patient will continue to not matter. He is treated as a statistic, at best. If the procedure has the potential to prevent a problem later on, regardless of the actual risk faced, the foreskin’s contribution to that risk, or the consequences of that risk, the illogical defense allowing parents to continue cutting the healthy genitals of their sons will continue.

Remember that populism doesn’t care about proper context in cost-benefit, or even the existence of such analysis. As long as the case could be made, every parent is assumed to be making it. And every infant is assumed to be pleased at that assumption, depsite the undeniable evidence that intact adult males almost never choose or need circumcision.

The out-of-context nonsense we use today is illogical to anyone seriously considering all the evidence. The risks are small. There are less-invasive treatments and preventions available. Comparable countries that do not circumcise manage to achieve the same low levels of disease. These facts are ignored because they contradict our mental conditioning. We believe of circumcision what we want to believe, not what is true. That is why we hear that male circumcision reduces the risk of HIV infection by 60% rather than the more honest explanation of how much it reduces the absolute risk. Sixty percent is far more persuasive than two percent.

For the United States we must be honest and ask if a central planner wannabe who is immune to the rights of individuals enough to issue mandates wouldn’t also be immune to fiscal rationing for non-medically-indicated circumcision, as long as it pleases “the people”.

Via Kevin, MD

“Unlawful personal injury” is an excellent description.

This is a step in the right direction:

A regional appeals court in Frankfurt am Main found that the circumcision of an 11-year-old Muslim boy without his approval was an unlawful personal injury.

According to the court, circumcision can “be important in individual cases for the cultural-religious and physical self-image,” even if there are no health disadvantages involved. So the decision about whether or not to go through with a circumcision is “a central right of a person to determine his identity and life.”

The penis belongs to the individual, not the individual’s parents or society. That’s as it should be, although the court failed to rule on an age minimum. The answer should be birth, although I don’t hold out much hope in the short-term for that lucid conclusion. Also, some of the court’s reasoning was silly.

The court suggested, in part, that it was a punishable offense to subject one’s child to teasing by other children for looking different.

That wouldn’t translate to the United States, where we have warped views of what it means to look different, how a person should decide to value the opinion of others, and whether or not those decisions belong to the individual or his parents. It’s also bad legal reasoning, since children would then have a “right” to fashionable clothing, for example, if his friends might laugh at him otherwise. Still, I applaud the basic outcome of the ruling. The court seems to have understood that forced circumcision is wrong.

A Correction and Further Proof

I’ve noted the correction in the original entry, but yesterday I incorrectly identified the author of the referenced editorial as a female. Hilary Bainemigisha is a male. The article did not make it clear, but I shouldn’t have made the mistake.

Thankfully, in submitting my entry, Digg user actics linked to a blog entry from the 4th International AIDS Society. The entry that actics used to (easily) figure out Mr. Bainemigisha’s gender is quite telling, given the irrationality Mr. Bainemigisha’s editorial endorsed. The setup:

[Dr Andrew Grulich of Australia’s National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research] said doctors in one well-run Kenyan circumcision study detected a slight but statistically significant increase in HIV infections among circumcised men at the end of the study, when they seemed to have become overly confident that circumcision would protect them completely from HIV and did away with using condoms, despite the warnings of the study organisers. Despite the slight increase in the number of circumcised men who became infected with HIV, it should be noted that overall, far fewer of the circumcised men became infected, in comparison with the control group of uncircumcised men.

The first sentence is the key, but it’s amazing how readily people are to focus only on that second sentence (which has its own problems, when considered in context).

But at 50% protection, there is nothing better than circumcision right now for men.

OK, condoms work brilliantly. But people don’t use them. (For example, Ansbert has two children, so presumably he didn’t use condoms at least twice in his life. And look at all those men, circumcised or not, who were told to use condoms and didn’t in the Kenyan study.)

The example of fathering children is irrelevant, and the “look at all those men” doesn’t mean what is interpreted here. But don’t worry, it gets worse.

With circumcision, a man doesn’t have to remember!

Without condoms and monogamy, he will still get HIV. With condoms and monogamy, circumcision is unnecessary.

So many want to have so much faith in circumcision that they abandon all rational consideration of the facts to make the story conform to the predetermined solution. It’s just as easy to believe in unicorns, but that doesn’t make unicorns real. Common sense has a place in medicine.

Thanks go to Digg user actics for this useful help. I shouldn’t have made the mistake on Mr. Bainemigisha’s gender. It’s been corrected. But my analysis didn’t depend on the journalist’s gender; it remains. Individuals who think like Mr. Bainemigisha and Esther Nakkazi, who wrote the blog entry discussed here, are being irrational.

If you have ears, allow something rational to pass through them to your brain.

In what can only be described as the most bizarre pro-circumcision editorial you’ll ever read, Hilary Bainemigisha urges men in Uganda to get circumcised to fight HIV. There are soccer metaphors and a weird belief in the penis as the “author of life”. All of it is idiotic, and the circumcision claims are irrational, as usual, including a recitation of the “circumcision is the best HIV prevention strategy” myth. There’s even a claim that men should get circumcised, no wait, get the facts and decide for yourself, then get circumcised. And then we’re graced with this, which is supposed to show how necessary circumcision is:

A study in the 12 months before the population survey revealed that 32% of HIV-positive women and 22% of HIV-positive men had sex with non-regular partners in the past year. 34% men and 5% women who were HIV-positive had sex with more than two partners. Of these, only 16% men and 17% women used condoms. And among discordants (where one partner is positive and the other negative), 5% used condoms consistently.

I’m beginning to wonder if people really are this stupid and blind to reality. If you have unprotected sex with multiple partners and a significant percentage of those partners are already HIV-positive, you will become HIV-positive. It is inevitable. Yet, the author asks:

Is this the environment you and your sons want to swim through with an uncircumcised [sic] tail?

If I were you, I would look at my penis, look at all the male members of my family and think about the five million who die annually of HIV. Then I would mobilise all of us, at whatever age, to get to hospital. I would also vow to afford the same protection to any newly born son to the family.

Not only is he indifferent to what he’s just demonstrated, he’s now lumped male children into the push for circumcision based on studies that looked exclusively at voluntary adult circumcision. If you’re going to live in your own world, devoid of facts, you might as well throw in a lack of ethics, I suppose.

Also, I’m proposing a new maxim. The trustworthiness of the circumcision proponent decreases exponentially with each euphemism for penis. If you can’t be mature enough to write penis instead of tail, you do not deserve to be taken seriously¹.

But remember, circumcision does not make you invincible. It only improves your escape chances by 60%. You still need to move along with the Abstinence Be Faithful, Use a Condom (ABC) approach, if you want to see your grandchildren.

No kidding. So why is it so difficult to understand that with the ABC approach, the risk of HIV is reduced for all, including intact males?

Finally, I call upon our female population to add a voice to my plea.

Find a way of getting men off their behinds to face the knife. The tool in question belongs to you as much as it belongs to men and had it not been for you, there would not be need to circumcise it.

First, see my new maxim in relation to tool².

More importantly, no, the man’s penis doesn’t belong to his partner (or should I say “partners”, given the statistic offered and ignored). Just like a child’s penis does not belong to his parents. We do not accept such thinking for men wishing to change the bodies of their female partners or daughters. The same must hold true for the author’s contention.

Update: The original version of this entry incorrectly referred to Hilary Bainemigisha using the pronoun she. It’s been corrected. I apologize for the confusion.

¹ To the extent that anyone proposing circumcision to prevent HIV should be taken seriously.

² I find member most common, which is the best proof of the immaturity on this issue.