IS CIRCUMCISION NECESSARY?
Today the world's pediatric associations unanimously agree that there is no
medical reason to circumcise and many insurance companies now refuse to pay for
the procedure, yet circumcision is still performed on 60 percent of newborn
males in the United States each year.
Some babies are circumcised for religious
reasons, some for cultural belief that it makes the body more attractive
sexually, and many others are put through this unnecessary surgery because it is
erroneously claimed to promote hygiene and prevent infection.
In circumcision,
the delicate covering of the head of the penis is pulled away, crushed, and cut
off.
For many years people believed that babies - especially newborns - did not
feel or remember pain.
Because of the known risks of giving babies anesthesia,
all kinds of surgeries used to be performed on conscious babies.
Today, it is
understood that a newborn baby does feel pain and is traumatized by undergoing
surgery without anesthesia; circumcision is the only surgery that continues to
be done without it.
I recall the first circumcision I saw.
The parents had gone
to great lengths to birth their baby without drugs other interventions so that
he might have a peaceful beginning.
He had spent his first week at home,
breast-fed and cuddled, before arriving at the pediatrician's to be circumcised.
The couple had argued over whether it should be done at all, but the boy's
father prevailed.
He felt his son's penis should look like his.
Both Parents were present, and the mother held the baby down.
Both Parents were present, and the mother held the baby down.
The moment the doctor put the clamp on the
foreskin, the boy began to scream.
His father went pale, turned away, and left
the room.
Holding her son's legs apart, the mother bent over him and tried to
calm him as the doctor cut quickly.
The baby, awake and helpless, continued to
scream. It took less than a minute, yet during that time, the baby had arched
his back, grabbed his mother's collar in both hands, and tried in vain to pull
himself away from the source of pain.
Afterward, his mother picked him up and
put him to her breast.
He suckled frantically, crying and gulping air between
swallows of warm milk.
Turning to me, the mother said, "I'd never have allowed
it if I'd known it would hurt him."
"We were told it was a simple procedure,
that few babies find it painful, and that if they do, they get over it," the
father later said.
I've since witnessed a number of circumcisions. In each case,
the baby obviously feels pain and makes a strong effort to escape.
Parents
trying to decide whether to have their infant son circumcised need to know that
the foreskin is a normal, healthy, protective tissue, and that the circumcision
procedure carries the serious threat of hemorrhage and unintentional mutilation.
Even if the procedure is successful, the wound is raw for ten to fifteen days.
Circumcision is painful and potentially traumatic, and the imprint of that
trauma can be lasting.
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