This Just In: Doctors in Denmark Want to Ban Circumcision

[SIZE=6]Doctors in Denmark want to ban circumcision for under-18s[/SIZE]

‘It is most consistent with the individual’s right to self-determination that parents not be allowed to make this decision,’ says Ethics Board
https://static.independent.co.uk/s3fs-public/styles/article_small/public/thumbnails/image/2016/12/06/15/circumcision-ceremony-getty.jpg
The circumcision ceremony of a baby at an Orthodox Jewish synagogue in Berlin, Germany. In 2013, a Cologne court sparked outrage among the country’s Jewish and Muslim population by questioning the legality of the practice Getty Images
Boys should not be circumcised until they are old enough to choose for themselves, doctorsin Denmark have said.

The Danish Medical Association said it had considered suggesting a legal ban on the procedure for children under the age of 18, because it believed circumcision should be “an informed, personal choice” that young men make for themselves.

When parents have their sons circumcised, it robs boys of the ability to make decisions about their own bodies, and choose their cultural and religious beliefs for themselves, the organisation said.

Lise Møller, chair of the Doctors’ Association Ethics Board, said it was wrong to deny an individual the right to choose whether or not they wanted to be circumcised.

“To be circumcised should be an informed, personal choice," she said.

“It is most consistent with the individual’s right to self-determination that parents not be allowed to make this decision, but that it is left up to the individual when he has come of age.”

The organisation said that because male circumcision is not without risk it should only be performed on children when there is a documented medical need.

The doctors stopped short of calling for an all-out legal ban on the procedure, which is currently allowed but remains relatively rare in Denmark, because it said the move could have too many negative consequences.

“We have discussed it thoroughly, also in our ethics committee," Ms Møller said. “We came to the conclusion that it is difficult to predict the consequences of a ban – both for the involved boys, who could for example face bullying or unauthorised procedures with complications – and for the cultural and religious groups they belong to.”

The Danish Health and Medicines Authority estimates that somewhere between 1,000 and 2,000 circumcisions are performed in Denmark each year, primarily on Jewish and Muslim boys.

The majority of those procedures occur outside of the public health system and are done as part of a religious ceremony in the child’s home, or in a private clinic.

The Danish Health Ministry announced on Monday that beginning in 2017 all circumcisions, regardless of where they take place, will have to be reported to Denmark’s national patient registry.

According to a major 2007 study by the World Health Organization, roughly 30 per cent of the global male population is circumcised.

Past polls have shown that upwards of 87 per cent of Danes support banning the practice on boys under the age of 18, [I]the Local[/I] reported.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/denmark-considering-banning-circumcision-for-children-under-18s-a7459291.html

Ok.

This debate is big and it can be extended to all decisions parents make for their kids,
-Religion,
-Education,
-Vaccines,
We have to agree that parents have got to make a decision on how to raise their kids

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you will just have opened another Pandorax box.

watu wakatwe waache upii

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a business idea: NGO on male genital mutilation. nyama itatoka huko denmark.

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[ATTACH=full]71671[/ATTACH]
Karibu NV

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Some people in the developed world have been arguing about this for a long time. There have been organizations in the US who have been against this act, for example, (Doctors opposing Circumscion, established 1995). The major assumption has been that it is ‘assaulting’ a child. The argument has been that no ‘child’ should be circumcised at birth, but let them grow until a time when they could make their own decision. This has led to a ban in ‘child circumcision’in some US states, Australia, Canada, Europe, among others ( https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumcision_and_law ). For one to undergo the ‘act’, they must be of sound mind, where according to the’developed world law’, an adult.

Do you that less than 60% adult males in the developed world are not circumcised?

On religion, I remember back in high school it was compulsory to attend church on Sundays, regardless of your beliefs/ denomination. Some fellows got cheeky and decided to skip, wakapatikana. When taken to the headteacher they argued that there’s freedom of worship. His classic retort? “Freedom of worship does not mean freedom not to worship!”

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