In Australia, the overall male circumcision rate is estimated to be around 30%, though newborn rates are much lower (around 1 in 5 or 20%), reflecting a significant decline from the 1950s when about 80% of males were circumcised, with rates varying by cultural background, location, and changing medical advice.
However, most medical bodies in developed countries, including in Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, take the opposite view. They do not recommend circumcision because they believe that the potential benefits of the procedure are outweighed by the associated risks.
Australia has seen a decrease in circumcision rates over the last 70 years or so. Back in the 1950s, roughly 80 per cent of Australian men and boys were circumcised. That rate has steadily decreased and now, around 20 per cent of Australian newborns are circumcised.
Present. Rates vary widely, from 99.9% in Morocco, and similarly high rates in many Muslim-majority countries, to 91.7% in Israel, 80% in the United States, to 75% in South Korea, to 45% in South Africa, to 20.7% in the United Kingdom, 14% in China, 13.5% in India, 9% in Japan, and 1% in Honduras.
However, a new study by researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health reveals that neonatal male circumcision (NMC) rates in the United States declined nearly 5% in the 10 years following the American Academy of Pediatrics statement in favor of the practice.
For those circumcised (n = 91), the median regret score was 0 (IQR 0–25). For those uncircumcised (n = 28), median regret score was 0 (IQR 0–24). Overall, 55% of both groups reported no regret (DRS = 0), 24% had low-mild regret (DRS 5–25), and 21% yielded moderate-strong regret (DRS 30–100).
In Japan, routine male circumcision has never been implemented for newborns and children, and adult males are mostly circumcised at aesthetic clinics. However, media reports indicate a trend of Japanese mothers willing to have their sons circumcised.
The CDC researchers estimated total circumcision prevalence to be 80.5% (Table 1). Racial differences were apparent: Prevalence was 90.8% in non-Hispanic white, 75.7% in non-Hispanic black, and 44.0% in Mexican American males.
In addition to personal, cultural, and religious aspects associated with the decision, you may have medical questions as well. Circumcision can be done at any age. Traditionally, the most common time to do it is soon after your baby is born, or within the first month of life.
European countries consider newborn circumcision an unnecessary surgical procedure which increases the costs of operating nationalised health systems, whereas in the US, circumcision is generally considered a simple, rapid operation with medical benefits which accrue throughout life.
In Australia, current health advice only supports routine circumcision for medical reasons.
YouGov's latest research shows that 62% of adult American men report being circumcised, and of those men 86% say that they are happy to have been circumcised. 10% do, however, say that they wish that they had NOT been circumcised.
ICYDK, as of a report published in 2016, the circumcision rate for males aged 15 and older in Singapore was around 14.9%. While most men undergo the procedure for religious reasons, others do it due to medical conditions such as phimosis – a congenital narrowing of the foreskin that prevents it from being retracted.
The research, by the director of Circumcision Information Australia, Shane Peterson, reveals a significant disparity between states. The most circumcisions occurred in Queensland (19.3 per cent), NSW (16.3 per cent) and South Australia (14.3 per cent) and the lowest rate was in Tasmania (1.6 per cent).
In draft guidelines issued in December, the CDC emphasized that the most up-to-date medical science indicates clear health benefits of circumcision—including a 50%-60% reduced risk of female-to-male HIV transmission, a 30% reduced risk of transmission of the human papilloma virus (HPV), and lower risk of urinary tract ...
The ceremony imparts the customs, laws and cultural responsibilities of Aboriginal society. Traditionally, as part of the initiation, various physical rites take place, such as circumcision, tooth avulsion, plucking of bodily hair, scarification and the removal of fingernails.
Among our patients, when asked about pain during circumcision performed under local anesthesia on a scale 1-10 with 1 being no pain, and 10 being the worst pain of your life, more than 90% of patients rate pain as 2-3. Most patients do not take prescribed pain medications or any other pain medications.
Circumcision might have various health benefits, including:
Transactions of the American Medical Association. 1870;21:205–11). Since that time, doctors have embraced circumcision for many reasons, citing research that suggests it can reduce rates of sexually transmitted diseases, penile cancer, urinary tract infections and slow the transmission of HIV.
Traditionally, Zoroastrians do not practice circumcision. Circumcision is not required in Yazidism, but is practised by some Yazidis due to regional customs. Circumcision is forbidden in Mandaeism, and the sign of the Jews given to Abraham by God, circumcision, is considered abhorrent.
Male circumcision is one of the most common procedures in the world. Approximately 40% of the worldwide male population is circumcised, and the prevalence is even higher among male children born in the United States [1,2].
Across the 32-year period from 1979 through 2010, the national rate of newborn circumcision declined 10% overall, from 64.5% to 58.3% (Table and Figure 1). During this time, the overall percentage of newborns circumcised during their birth hospitalization was highest in 1981 at 64.9%, and lowest in 2007 at 55.4%.
It depends on the community. We are currently working with a Mennonite community and all the boys that have been born were circumcised. There is an Amish community downstate that doesn't circumcise. So it really depends on the community as to what they practice.
In China, the nation with the largest population in the world, circumcision is generally treated as a selective medical intervention to treat some diseases; only 2.66% of males have been circumcised, and EIMC is not a traditional practice, except among Muslims, who account for < 3% of the population [14].
There are no systematic reports of accurate prevalence of circumcision in Latin America, but isolated reports from selected groups from Latin American and the Caribbean ranging from 5% in Dominican Republic and Haiti to 11% (Panama, Costa Rica and Colombia), and 38% in Mexico.