Mugisu Man Flees Knife June 22, 2002 Residents of Kingala village, Mbale district, were treated to free drama recently when a man demanded for a fee and still refused to be circumcised. Moses Wangusa, who was visiting his parents, was reminded by his father that he had never been circumcised and in order "to be a man", he had to honour the custom. He thought his father was joking until he saw relatives assembling and giving him presents. One veteran performer of the ritual was notified and he too came home to inquire when it was going to take place. To frustrate them, Moses asked for sh100,000 thinking that they would not raise it. To his surprise, the relatives raised it and gave it to him. He now knew he was cornered. He took a boda boda that dropped him in the town at 5.30am but it was too early to get a bus. He opted for a lorry carrying matooke and made good his escape. |
National Organization of Circumcision Information Resource Centers press release Arizona Ends Medicaid Circumcisions PHOENIX – Arizona became the seventh state to eliminate Medicaid funding for infant circumcision this week, when Governor Jane Hull allowed the state’s budget to become law without her signature. Last year, Arizona Medicaid paid for 12,600 boys to be circumcised at an average cost of $132 per boy and a total cost of $1.66 million. Currently, Medicaid programs in California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, North Dakota and Mississippi do not cover circumcision. Nor do many private HMOs serving Medicaid recipients, as well as some private insurance companies. Circumcision is not recommended by any national or international medical organization in the world. Medicaid pays for 25% of all US newborn circumcisions. A 2001 report issued by the International Coalition for Genital Integrity (ICGI, www.icgi.org) documents Medicaid spends tens of millions of dollars per year on circumcision. ICGI Co-Director Dr. Rio Cruz said, “It is simply deplorable that our government uses healthcare tax dollars to subsidize a cultural procedure that causes pain, long-term harm, and violates a child’s right to bodily integrity.” Bills have been introduced in Missouri, Michigan, and New Mexico to cease Medicaid funding of the procedure. North Carolina also has infant circumcision on its list of potential budget cuts. National Organization of Circumcision Information Resource Centers
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UN Commission Condemns Circumcision of Male and Female Children in Guinea-Bissau
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Arizona Ends Funding for Circumcision Arizona Daily Sun
House uses prisoner releases, school cuts to help balance budget
By HOWARD FISCHER PHOENIX -- State lawmakers voted Thursday to release prisoners and let
them serve their sentences at home, lease new school buildings instead of
buying them for cash, cut $90 million earmarked for school repairs and
even stop having the state pay for circumcision of boys born to needy
women, all to balance next year's $6.57 billion budget.
The plan adopted by the House also cuts 3.125 percent from most state
agencies -- 2.25 percent for universities -- on top of the 4.5 percent
budget reductions they already sustained to balance this year's budget.
...
The legislative provision on circumcision stems from the discovery that
the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System is charged $132 every time
the procedure is performed. And with more than 12,600 baby boys born last
year to women enrolled in the state health care program, that adds up.
Sen. Ruth Solomon, D-Tucson, who chairs the Senate Appropriations
Committee, said lawmakers needed to seek out and eliminate every program
that is not necessary.
"There are all kids of reports now that say it isn't medically necessary,"
she said.
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[The use of "even" suggests that Howard Fischer is incredulous at the State taking such a desperate measure. His amazement is unfounded. For example, New Zealand stopped state funding of circumcision some 30 years ago.]
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Tidsskr Nor Lægeforen (Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association) 2001; 121: 2994 Norwegian Council for Medical Ethics opposes circumcision The Council for Medial Ethics states that ritual circumcision of boys is not consistent with important principles of medical ethics, that it is without medical value, and should not be paid for with public funds. The council has sent a statement to the board of the Norwegian Medical Association on this matter. Among other things, the council says that ritual circumcision of boys has no established medical benefit. Even with the use of local anaesthesia, the procedure causes pain and is associated with certain risks of medical complications. The Council for Medical Ethics states that circumcision of boys is not consistent with important principles of medical ethics laid down as general determinations in Paragraph 1 (§ 1) of the Ethical Rules for Doctors. These require doctors to uphold human health, and to cure, relieve and comfort. The council points out that it is an important factor that the child cannot give consent. According to the council, doctors should be allowed to refuse to perform ritual circumcision as a matter of conscience. The council makes a point of noting that, when performed, even if not for medical reasons, that circumcision is a surgical operation that must be carried out according to correct principles of surgery and with proper anaesthesia. In line with the Ethical Rules for Doctors § 12, it should not be paid for by the public health service. The council has invited relevant religious leaders in our community to work on replacing circumcision with symbolic rituals that do not involve a surgical procedure. |
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