Anonymous wrote:Is this for real or a marketing scheme?Anonymous wrote:
Male circumcision rates in Europe are currently around ten percent. If U.S. rates dropped that low in the next ten years, the authors predict:
•a 12 percent increase in men infected with HIV
•29 percent more men infected with human papillomavirus (HPV)
•a 19 percent increase in men infected with herpes simplex virus
•a 211 percent jump in the number of infant male urinary tract infections
I enough about statistic to question this, and wonder you do not
Is this for real or a marketing scheme?Anonymous wrote:
Male circumcision rates in Europe are currently around ten percent. If U.S. rates dropped that low in the next ten years, the authors predict:
•a 12 percent increase in men infected with HIV
•29 percent more men infected with human papillomavirus (HPV)
•a 19 percent increase in men infected with herpes simplex virus
•a 211 percent jump in the number of infant male urinary tract infections
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thought you might want to think on this:
What price is America willing to put on a foreskin? $4.4 billion, a team of disease experts and health economists at Johns Hopkins report today in the journal Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. That’s the extra health care costs they predict will surface if U.S. circumcision rates continue drop over the next decade.
Currently about 55 percent of males born in the U.S. each year are circumcised. That’s down from 79 percent in the seventies and eighties. That decline has already cost the U.S. $2 billion, the experts estimate.
Male circumcision rates in Europe are currently around ten percent. If U.S. rates dropped that low in the next ten years, the authors predict:
•a 12 percent increase in men infected with HIV
•29 percent more men infected with human papillomavirus (HPV)
•a 19 percent increase in men infected with herpes simplex virus
•a 211 percent jump in the number of infant male urinary tract infections
This decrease in male circumcision would also increase risks for female sex partners. The researchers predict 50 percent more cases of both bacterial vaginosis and trichomoniasis. Infections of the kind of HPV linked to cervical cancer in women would increase by 18 percent.
Johns Hopkins explains the study methods in a press release:
In the study, researchers constructed a novel economic model to predict the cost implications of not circumcising a male newborn. Included in their forecasting was information from multiple studies and databases that closely tracked the number of overall infections for each sexually transmitted disease, as well as the numbers of new people infected. Costs were conservatively limited to direct costs for drug treatment, physician visits and hospital care, and did not include indirect costs from work absences and medical travel expenses.
Circumcision opponents call the practice cruel. This summer, a German court went as far as to outlaw the procedure for young boys. The New York Daily news reports:
In the United States, a vocal movement of “intactivists,” or people who oppose male circumcision, is engaged in a fierce debate with doctors over the practice of clipping baby boys’ foreskins.
Actor Russell Crowe may be the most famous of them. Earlier this year he declared on Twitter: “Circumcision is barbaric and stupid,” before swiftly tweeting sorry to anyone who thought he was “mocking the rituals and traditions of others.”
yeah, that sounds like a great trend to me.
What's the source for this? It sounds like the Onion. Of course if what you were saying were true, European countries (and many others around the world) would have higher rates of HIV than the US. Is this true? No. They would have higher rates of HPV. Also not true. They would have higher rates of UTIs, again not true. And they would have higher rates of Herpes. Again, not true. Where on earth do those statements come from and how can anyone keep a straight face while trying to defend them? Utterly laughable.
Anonymous wrote:Thought you might want to think on this:
What price is America willing to put on a foreskin? $4.4 billion, a team of disease experts and health economists at Johns Hopkins report today in the journal Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. That’s the extra health care costs they predict will surface if U.S. circumcision rates continue drop over the next decade.
Currently about 55 percent of males born in the U.S. each year are circumcised. That’s down from 79 percent in the seventies and eighties. That decline has already cost the U.S. $2 billion, the experts estimate.
Male circumcision rates in Europe are currently around ten percent. If U.S. rates dropped that low in the next ten years, the authors predict:
•a 12 percent increase in men infected with HIV
•29 percent more men infected with human papillomavirus (HPV)
•a 19 percent increase in men infected with herpes simplex virus
•a 211 percent jump in the number of infant male urinary tract infections
This decrease in male circumcision would also increase risks for female sex partners. The researchers predict 50 percent more cases of both bacterial vaginosis and trichomoniasis. Infections of the kind of HPV linked to cervical cancer in women would increase by 18 percent.
Johns Hopkins explains the study methods in a press release:
In the study, researchers constructed a novel economic model to predict the cost implications of not circumcising a male newborn. Included in their forecasting was information from multiple studies and databases that closely tracked the number of overall infections for each sexually transmitted disease, as well as the numbers of new people infected. Costs were conservatively limited to direct costs for drug treatment, physician visits and hospital care, and did not include indirect costs from work absences and medical travel expenses.
Circumcision opponents call the practice cruel. This summer, a German court went as far as to outlaw the procedure for young boys. The New York Daily news reports:
In the United States, a vocal movement of “intactivists,” or people who oppose male circumcision, is engaged in a fierce debate with doctors over the practice of clipping baby boys’ foreskins.
Actor Russell Crowe may be the most famous of them. Earlier this year he declared on Twitter: “Circumcision is barbaric and stupid,” before swiftly tweeting sorry to anyone who thought he was “mocking the rituals and traditions of others.”
yeah, that sounds like a great trend to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not let someone as judgmental and clearly in need of therapy change my son's diapers. Just would not do it. We don't have a lot of judgmental psychos in our boys diapers. Just sayin'
Yes, this. It's astonishing this poster has any friends at all. Certainly, the second Judge Judy mentioned that was too bad that the other mother "mutilated" her son would be the end of the friendship -- and every parent in a several mile radius would know to avoid her like the plague.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Increasingly Jews aren't circumcising. There was a thread on that here a couple of months ago. I suggest you look at it before trying to make this an anti-semetic issue which it IS NOT.
and good for them, but there still are many (most) that do (and there are many more mixed couples, especially around here). I think there is a large undercurrent of anti-semitism in this whole discussion on DCUM. I personally don't care what you do, and I wish the same respect would be given to everyone else.
Well, other than the US, the countries with the highest rates of circumcision are Muslim. Do you also think that people who are against cutting boys are prejudice against Muslims? I have to say that you are bat-shit crazy if you think that anyone here is saying anything against your religion. We are talking about a practice that is outdated and irrelevant in the modern day. Religions evolve and adapt - or they should. Many people use religion to justify being against same sex marriage. Do you think that saying they are wrong is prejudice against their religion?
Also, I should add, if you are going to justify doing this, I find it much more reasonable when people do it for religious reasons than for faux health benefits. At least they are up front about their reasons. And it's much more palatable to hear that than "I wanted my kid to look like his dad". Sigh.
Anonymous wrote:The US doctors' view isn't really even that different. Neither recommends routine infant cirumcision.