Why is circumcision archaic? What about the health benefits?
Medicalized circumcision has been around for about 150 years in North America. It was considered “cleaner” and many argued that it could reduce the incidence of diseases. Many still make these claims today. But if circumcision were introduced today, it would be soundly rejected by the medical community as a needless, invasive surgery with extremely dubious health benefits. The practice of circumcision continues these days simply because it’s been around for so long–but are the health benefits enough to keep it going? Is there more than just hygiene that we should consider?
Even if circumcision had health benefits, there are significant downsides:
– You lose a normal part of your anatomy, which is known to be a sensitive erogenous zone. It also facilitates sexual intercourse and manual stimulation, essentially providing lubrication through its mechanical function.
– You expose the child to considerable pain during after after the operation
– You expose the child to risk of infection, injury or even death from the procedure or complications therefrom.
– You interfere with breastfeeding and bonding with the mother by taking him away to do an unnecessary procedure which will result in pain to a sensitive area.
Existing medical ethics state that in the absence of a very strong justification, you should never perform operations on patients who cannot consent. Parental choice on its own is not sufficient, and doctors must consider only the best interest of the patient. If a procedure can be “harmlessly deferred” without significant risk to the patient, then it must wait until the patient (the child) can decide on their own.
More generally, in the absence of valid reason to perform medical interventions, nothing should be done. Hence the oft-quoted adage, “First, do no Harm”. Circumcision is definitely harm, and in order to justify causing physical damage and over-riding the need for patient consent, the expected benefit must be correspondingly very large. At present, medical societies say that the suspected benefits of circumcision do not outweigh the inherent risk of infection or injury from the procedure itself. So, it is needless and unjustifiable harm to a child. It is currently acknowledged to be done purely on parent’s request for cultural reasons, i.e. conformity and cosmetics. The claims of “health benefits” are just smoke and mirrors to try to (minimally) justify a surgery which is very unethical, but nonetheless socially accepted; part of why it’s accepted is the perception of medical endorsement. It is actually just medical complicity.
The hygiene is just a non-issue. If hygiene were a problem, then non-circumcising Europe would be overrun by genital infections in boys. Statistics show that’s not the case. We simply perceive foreskin as “gross”. If you teach a boy to rinse under his foreskin in the shower, he will be golden.
The reason circumcision exists is twofold. Firstly, it was a religious tradition that was never challenged (in the past, governments didn’t interfere much in order to protect children). Secondly, in the mid-1800s, circumcision became “medicalized” and doctors proposed it as a cure for everything. They made the same claims for women, too. The main justification was to prevent boys from masturbating, which was considered a source of disease. The practice continued until today, with the reasons evolving slowly over time. In the last 50 years or so, there have been two new developments that threaten circumcision: the practice of evidence-based medicine, and the modernization of medical ethics. (For example, in the past, sometimes doctors wouldn’t tell you had cancer, if they believed the news would be too traumatic. Nowadays we have replaced paternalism with well enshrined patient rights. Now we have consent forms, the need for proper informed patient consent, etc.) Circumcision is reduced to insignificance in the face of evidence-based medicine. Taking into account modern ethics, this old surgery now is clearly archaic and an inappropriate violation of the rights of the patient (the baby).