Not my style, sorry. While I occasionally tease people I do my best not to ******* them.![]()
Not mine, either. But I notice that it did not seem to hold you back from presenting one-sided information further down in this post.
I think that is a harsh and unjustified reaction. I had stated in an earlier post that if I was faced with a decision on whether or not to have my hypothetical son circumcised, I would feel compelled to do furthur research based on the information that has been discussed in this thread.
I didn't intend it to be harsh. I wasn't talking about how you would research information for yourself, but how you could go about getting people off your back. If you want to present the case against circumcision to others, it makes sense to look at articles that do just that to simplify your information gathering. It would take a lot more work to look at all the information and pick out those pieces yourself. And you did say that you were going to look at the citations in the article (the one you were told was highly biased and unrepresentative) and use them if they held up. If you were really interested in all the information, why just use citations from an anti article?
It seems to me that the main difference of opinion among the people posting in this thread so far is how painful the procedure is to the baby and whether it has long term adverse affects.
If I understand the other side correctly, some feel that a male circumsicion performed on an 8 day or younger baby is of no more consequence than of a teenager getting their ears pierced. However, I've read several articles (with footnotes) that points to evidence including raised plasma cortisol levels and heart beats showing that this is simply not so -- that the baby feels a great deal of pain. That in fact, at such a young age they feel more pain than an adult would undergoing the same procedure. There was at least one study that claimed that undergoing so much pain at an early stage in life leaves a permanent change in the nervous system that results in circumcised boys feeling more pain than uncircumcised boys do from the same pain stimulus years later. The example studied was when both groups of boys were receiving vacinations.
Either the scientists that performed these studies have a history of doing repeatable work or they don't. Either the conclusions have been verified or they have not.
How could one possibly be opposed to looking for more information to finding this out?
I don't think anyone would. I notice that your summary of the research comparing the groups of kids that were vaccinated is one-sided. For example, you did not mention that the children circumcised with EMLA cream did not have a significantly different response to pain from the uncircumcised group (although there was a trend). It's misleading to say "years later" when that conclusion cannot be supported by the study. You did not mention that heart rate and cortisol responses are reduced by measures taken during circumcision like positioning on a padded comfortable surface, pacifiers dipped in sucrose, use of anaesthetic.
If anyone has found studies that claim that babies nervous systems are too immature to feel the pain, or that the pain is very minimal please feel free to provide the links. I don't believe that there has been any links to studies showing these conclusions in this thread. At this point I don't know if any studies showing these conclusions exist.
I don't think anyone has argued that measures shouldn't be taken to reduce pain if circumcision is to be done.
Linda