BC Health Pays to Restore Man's Foreskin
Landmark
patient calls circumcision 'human rights abuse.'
By Amanda Euringer
Published: July 25, 2006
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TheTyee.ca

'Circumstraint'
board: used for infants. Photo: James Loewen.
http://thetyee.ca/News/2006/07/25/Circumcision/
This past April, Vancouver resident Dr. Paul Tinari became the
first Canadian man to have a heath-care-funded foreskin
restoration. When he was eight years old, doctors at his school
performed an operation without his consent. After years of
painful erections, and frequent infections, Dr. Tinari -- with
the support of his doctor and psychiatrist -- successfully sued,
and as a result, the B.C. Ministry of Health paid for 90 per cent
of the $12,000 operation. Dr. Tinari says he hopes that it will
set a precedent for legal action that will eventually end the
practice of infant circumcision all together.
Dr. Tinari, an engineer, considers himself uniquely authorized to
discuss the subject of circumcision. "I was uncircumcised
until I was eight, then circumcised until I was 48, and am now
again uncircumcised, so I really have seen all sides of this
issue." Tinari, a Metis, describes being held down and
circumcised as a young boy in what he says was "a routine
form of punishment" for masturbation at residential schools.
He claims that thousands of young native and Metis boys were
circumcised during their stays in the residential school system.
Dr. Tinari's case and his efforts to bring awareness to the issue
are the most recent instalments in a movement against what the
medical establishment calls routine, non-therapeutic male
circumcision. North America has the highest rates in the world
for this procedure, but currently, no regional, national or
international medical body in the western world advocates its
practice. In fact, many, like the College of Physicians and
Surgeons of B.C., recommend against it. Historically, many
doctors performed circumcisions believing there were
psychological and medical benefits, but anti-circumcision
advocates say that since these medical benefits have now been
disproved, the issue is one of cruelty.
Dr. Tinari says his intention is to rectify what he sees as
"human rights abuse" and a "gross violation"
of a small child's body.
A brief history of the hoody
The history of circumcision in North America is tied to attitudes
towards masturbation. In the late 1800s, for example, Dr. John
Harvey Kellogg (who invented Kellogg's Corn Flakes and believed
that bland foods curb passions) was considered the leading
circumcision authority.
"A remedy for masturbation which is almost always successful
in small boys is circumcision," Kellogg wrote in his 1888
book, Treatment for Self Abuse and its Effects. "The
operation should be performed by a surgeon without administering
an anesthetic as the pain attending the operation will have a
salutary effect upon the mind, especially if it be connected with
the idea of punishment."
Music Pix
Many doctors followed his advice, performing circumcisions
without anesthetic on male and female babies.
At the time, doctors performed female circumcision by dripping
carbolic acid on the genitalia. Unlike male circumcision, this
practice did not endure to the present day. By the turn of the
century, medical journals regularly directly listed male
circumcision as a cure or prevention for many illnesses and even
criminality.
In 1928, the American Medical Association published a journal
article in which renowned British doctor R.W. Cockshut wrote:
"I suggest all male children be circumcised. I am convinced
that masturbation is much less common in the circumcised."
From dirty to clean
The sexual revolution may have brought a greater acceptance of
masturbation, but by 1970, 90 per cent of all North American boys
were being routinely circumcised. Now, many parents who opt to
have their sons circumcised say they do so for reasons of
cleanliness.
Dennis Harrison, another Vancouver resident, is one of the main
spokespeople for the Association for Genital Integrity, a
Canadian group committed to raising public awareness of the
issues surrounding infant male circumcision. His group applied
for funding to start a legal process to end what he describes as
unjust genital mutilation. The group was turned down and is now
appealing the process.
"I think the whole thing hinges on the cultural perception
of the foreskin as being just a problem waiting to happen. The
'circumcision decision' is then framed as 'Do we get rid of it at
birth, or expose the kid to the risk of urinary tract infections,
cancer and God knows what else?' On the surface, this seems like
a rational approach but it's analogous to 'Do we chop off the
little finger at birth, or wait for it to get caught in the car
door or develop cancer?' You could use this logical framework to
justify cutting off practically anything, because what body part
never causes problems?" he says.
The medical profession has undergone a radical change of opinion
regarding circumcision over the past few years. The College of
Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia published a paper in
2004 stating that due to insufficient proof of its benefits,
"routine infant male circumcision, i.e. routine removal of
normal tissue in a healthy infant, is not recommended."
The snip in Saskatchewan
In February 2002, the College of Physicians in Saskatchewan
issued a much more strongly worded memo on the subject that
states:
In spite of the fact that the Canadian Pediatric Society (CPS)
has for two and a half decades explicitly cautioned against
routine circumcision of newborn male infants, 27.6 per cent of
newborn males were circumcised in the province in 2000-2001.
Since August 1996, infant circumcision has not been a publicly
insured service in Saskatchewan. The decision to de-insure the
service was based partly on the lack of valid medical indications
for the procedure.
Even though citizens must now personally pay for this service,
the incidence of routine male circumcision has dropped only
moderately over the past five years.
It is difficult to identify any other domain of medicine in which
physicians would feel comfortable playing such a passive role in
a decision pathway culminating in surgery. It is also difficult
to identify any other domain of medicine in which practice
patterns stand in such stark contrast to research evidence.
At present, no regional, national or international public health
authority in the western world advocates the routine circumcision
of children, either male or female. However, several studies have
found some medical advantages for the practice. One study found
that "male circumcision is associated with a significantly
reduced risk of HIV infection among men in sub-Saharan Africa,
particularly those at high risk of HIV," but the study does
point out that circumcision does not prevent HIV infection.
Others found little or no difference in HIV rates for circumcised
men. Still, many non-medical people assume there is a sound
medical basis for circumcising infant boys.
"I find the anatomical aspect very interesting,"
continues Harrison. "When medicalized circumcision first
took off, 100 years ago or so, the foreskin could [supposedly]
potentially cause everything from curvature of the spine to
insanity. Then for a while the foreskin became nothing -- a mere
'fold of skin.' Now it's something again, but it 'causes' AIDS.
So the anatomy keeps changing, as required to support
circumcision. Suggestions that the foreskin has useful functions
are ignored or downplayed."
Useful tip
It was another Canadian, Dr. John Taylor, who first started doing
research into just what those useful functions might be. While
the dense collection of nerve endings in female genitalia (the
so-called "g-spot") had been a focus of research and
discussion for some decades already, it wasn't until the mid-'90s
that Dr. Taylor published his first study in what he has called
the "ridged band." The ridged band is a ring of deeply
corrugated or ridged mucous membrane lining the tip of the
foreskin.
Initially, Dr. Taylor was interested in studying the tissue in
order to help him make an informed decision about circumcising
his own children. What he found was that the foreskin is actually
a highly specialized tissue that is comparable to an eyelid;
foreskins are actually used in eyelid replacement surgery. Dr.
Taylor says that when you remove the foreskin you are removing
"half of the skin of the penis," and large amounts of
specialized mucosa, which has in it specialized nerve endings
called genital nerve endings. In simple language, according to
Dr. Taylor's research, it is the man's foreskin that is analogous
to the clitoris -- not the glans or head as is widely believed.
In an interview by Intact, an organization that seeks to end
non-therapeutic male infant circumcision, Dr. Taylor was quoted
as stating, "I think if you remove the vast bulk of the
software from your penis, then you're going to suffer. If you
lose all your specialized sensory nerve endings, and then the
mechanism, the skin, and the rest of the penis that makes these
nerve endings work, during sexual intercourse, or whatever, then
you'll suffer. Obviously people who are circumcised don't miss
what they've never had. It's like someone who was born blind, I
guess. Now whether that's because they compensate, or do it in
some different way, I don't know. No one knows."
While most people think of the foreskin as a fairly small section
of skin, Dr. Taylor's research indicates that the proportion is
relatively large for a baby. In a female, the equivalent would be
about the same as removing the clitoral hood and labia, a
practice that most of the westernized world openly abhors.
What's good for the goose
Several doctors and lawyers told The Tyee that Canadian doctors
are increasingly being asked to circumcise girls. By law, doctors
cannot perform the surgery since even though male circumcision is
still legal in North America, female circumcision has been banned
through protective legislation in both Canada and the U.S. But
doctors are being asked to do the operation anyway in order to
respect the religious and cultural beliefs of the families.
Anti-circumcision advocates say this begs the question: when
there is no medical reason to perform the surgery for either sex,
why do most Canadians consider the practice to be mutilation for
women, and not for men?
"While a doctor would never perform a vasectomy on a baby --
which is reversible," Tinari states, "you can get a
circumcision done, which is not. Male circumcision is a feminist
issue: as long as the door is open to male circumcision, then it
is also open to female."
'Conspiracy of silence'
Tinari argues that "there is a conspiracy of silence around
circumcision. First of all, the men who have been circumcised
don't want to admit that there might be anything wrong with them,
and they certainly wouldn't want to face that they had made a bad
decision for their sons."
Tinari claims that "circumcision is also a
multi-billion-dollar industry in Canada and the U.S." and
that one doctor in the Lower Mainland of B.C. claims to have
performed 20,000 circumcisions over the past decade, charging
around $250 per procedure.
"There is the resale value," says Tinari. He is
referring to the fact that human foreskins are a highly valuable
tissue that can be grown in a lab to the size of a football
field.
The foreskin has more blood cells and nerve endings than almost
any other skin on the body. Most baby foreskins are used in
insulin production, breathable bandages, and in the cosmetics
industry. People like Tinari wonder why the sale of all other
human tissue is considered illegal, or is highly regulated, yet
doctors are allowed to remove healthy tissue without the
patient's consent and against all medical recommendations, then
sell it for profit in a for-profit industry.
Dr. Tinari estimates that between the surgery and the foreskin's
resale value, each foreskin is worth approximately $100,000. His
intention is to launch a legal battle, which he will call
"The Head Tax" in which he aims to restore at least 10
per cent of that figure to the portion of the 10 million men in
Canada who had the procedure non-consensually. But while Tinari
says the issue is a moral one, he aims to fight it on the
financial front. "When the cost of lawsuits exceeds the
money that they are making from the surgery, that is when it's
going to end. It won't end before that. Some people will join the
class action lawsuit for the money, and although I would hope
they did for moral reasons.... I don't care why they join."
As for his surgery? Tinari says he is very happy, "in every
way," with his new skin.
Amanda Euringer is a
Vancouver writer.