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Re: Mayo Clinic rerpot: benefits of circumcision far outweigh the risks
One of the odd things about discussions of the circumcision studies on gay forums is that most of the discussions miss the point. The studies are of heterosexual transmission in SubSaharan Africa which has resulted in the death of millions of women and children.
Early in the pandemic, there was a theory that African men were having clandestine homosexual encounters- because heterosexual transmission in the west was relatively rare and there was a cultural bias in the research that assumed that the rest of the world is like the US where HIV was a "gay disease". To researchers in the US, it was illogical that women were infecting men- after all, this just didn't happen in the much better studied populations in the US.
Thirty years into the epidemic, there are 24 million people with HIV in Africa. The circumcision studies were a breakthrough in the understanding of HIV transmission in Africa but they just have limited application in the United States where anal sex is still the predominant means of transmission.
Where the studies may help with understanding of HIV risks in the US are in minority populations- where risk reduction hasn't been as effective and we don't completely understand why.
I haven't read the paper yet but often statements are taken out of context. If the recommendation is that circumcision be offered to parents of newborn boys, that's not particularly ground-breaking, as that is the current practice in most of the US. If the recommendation is that circumcision be promoted as a preventative measure- that may be going too far. Surgical procedures come with some amount of risk and just like we wouldn't recommend removal of the appendix to prevent appendicitis or removal of the breasts to prevent breast cancer, it would not be good practice to promote circumcision to prevent disease... at least not in the US where better options are available for prevention.
And once again - the UNAIDS and WHO state that it only matters among heterosexual males, not for us queers. Jesus if cutting off the foreskin was it all took to stop HIV spreading the US would never have had a problem in the 80s.
Ah! common sense strikes again....
One of the odd things about discussions of the circumcision studies on gay forums is that most of the discussions miss the point. The studies are of heterosexual transmission in SubSaharan Africa which has resulted in the death of millions of women and children.
Early in the pandemic, there was a theory that African men were having clandestine homosexual encounters- because heterosexual transmission in the west was relatively rare and there was a cultural bias in the research that assumed that the rest of the world is like the US where HIV was a "gay disease". To researchers in the US, it was illogical that women were infecting men- after all, this just didn't happen in the much better studied populations in the US.
Thirty years into the epidemic, there are 24 million people with HIV in Africa. The circumcision studies were a breakthrough in the understanding of HIV transmission in Africa but they just have limited application in the United States where anal sex is still the predominant means of transmission.
Where the studies may help with understanding of HIV risks in the US are in minority populations- where risk reduction hasn't been as effective and we don't completely understand why.
One of the big criticisms of the US healthcare system is that it focuses on illness (both in practice and in profits) and not on prevention. Mayo has been on the forefront of changing the healthcare delivery model to one that focuses on prevention, so it does make sense that they would look at the issue.rareboy said:I don't know how the Mayo Clinic has its name on this.
I haven't read the paper yet but often statements are taken out of context. If the recommendation is that circumcision be offered to parents of newborn boys, that's not particularly ground-breaking, as that is the current practice in most of the US. If the recommendation is that circumcision be promoted as a preventative measure- that may be going too far. Surgical procedures come with some amount of risk and just like we wouldn't recommend removal of the appendix to prevent appendicitis or removal of the breasts to prevent breast cancer, it would not be good practice to promote circumcision to prevent disease... at least not in the US where better options are available for prevention.

