Skip to main content

Restoring Tally logo

One man's journey through life

  • Home
  • Foreskin Restoration
  • Intactivism
  • Links
  • About
Home » Web Links » Intactivism (Pro-Intact) | Circumcision Studies | Intactivism (Pro-Intact) | HIV / AIDS

Future HIV Therapy: Male circumcision is not the HIV ‘vaccine’ we have been waiting for!

by Tally on June 2, 2010 Bookmark and Share
Visit http://www.futuremedicine.com/doi/full/10.2217/17469600.2.3.193

Article published in Future Medicine, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 193-199 , May 2008. DOI 10.2217/17469600.2.3.193 The authors examine the three randomized clinical trials (RCTs) conducted in Africa and find them wanting. A recent commentary claims that circumcision is "at least as good as the HIV vaccine we have been waiting for, praying for and hoping to see in our lifetimes." The article provides an analysis that refutes that statement.

The push to institute mass circumcision in Africa, following the three randomized clinical trials (RCTs) conducted in Africa, is based on an incomplete evaluation of real-world preventive effects over the long-term  effects that may be quite different outside the research setting and circumstances, with their access to resources, sanitary standards and intensive counseling. Moreover, proposals for mass circumcision lack a thorough and objective consideration of costs in relation to hoped-for benefits. No field-test has been performed to evaluate the effectiveness, complications, personnel requirements, costs and practicality of proposed approaches in real-life conditions. These are the classic distinctions between efficacy and effectiveness trials, and between internal validity and external validity.
 
Campaigns to promote safe-sex behaviors have been shown to accomplish a high rate of infection reduction, without the surgical risks and complications of circumcision, and at a much lower cost. For the health community to rush to recommend a program based on incomplete evidence is both premature and ill-advised. It misleads the public by promoting false hope from uncertain conclusions and might ultimately aggravate the problem by altering peoples behavioral patterns and exposing them and their partners to new or expanded risks. Given these problems, circumcision of adults, and especially of children, by coercion or by false hope, raises human rights concerns.

This 2008 article is just as relevant today as it was two years ago. There are reports that men in Africa believe that their circumcision insulates them from HIV infection. With this belief, they are not attempting to practice safe sex.

The article also raises the point that the trials did not consider the long term effects of male circumcision. Even now, with African nations instituting mass circumcision policies, no one is considering further studies to see if the mass circumcision is actually reducing the HIV rates. Instead, men are being sold on the idea that having a circumcised penis is better than having an intact penis. It would be prudent for those countries to at least track the efficacy of circumcision to determine if the program is working as advertised.

In short, given the large number of unknowns, confounding factors and lack of long-term follow-up in the three RCTs, it is premature to recommend circumcision as an HIV-prevention strategy. Much more evidence must be gathered on real-world efficacy of male circumcision as a prevention tool before mass surgeries are implemented.
 
An objective scientific assessment must be conducted to determine if the three RCTs are applicable in real-world settings. And, to determine the true cost of a circumcision campaign, there must be a comprehensive resource analysis of the plan. These mass circumcision costs also must be compared with the opportunity costs of funding ABC campaigns.
 
As part of these assessments, the very real risks of circumcision surgery, including directly increasing HIV transmission to men as well as indirectly increasing transmission to women, surgical risks such as hemorrhage, other infections, meatal stenosis, need for repeat surgery and even death, must be considered.
 
Finally, the value and function of the foreskin as an integral part of the male sexual organ [31] and the ethical issues surrounding such surgery, including informed consent, the possibility of coercion and the dangerous implications of conveying erroneous messages of HIV immunity, must also be carefully considered in any analysis.
 
ABC programs offer nearly full protection from HIV infection, yet even if circumcision’s effectiveness matches the 50–60% effectiveness the RCTs reported, it only partially protects men, does not protect women at all, and leaves women more vulnerable to unsafe sex practices being forced upon them.
 

Tags:
  • Circumcision Studies
  • HIV / AIDS
  • Login to post comments

Who is this guy?

Restoring Tally is just an ordinary guy who had to confront his prostate and circumcision problems. This site chronicles his journey in dealing with these issues. He has had prostate surgery and he is restoring his foreskin.

Read more about Tally

Recent Blog Posts

  • Happy 9th Birthday, RestoringForeskin.org!
  • 9 year foreskin restoration progress report
  • Happy 8th Birthday, RestoringForeskin.org!
  • Happy 7th Birthday, RestoringForeskin.org!
  • Happy 6th Birthday, RestoringForeskin.org!
  • My first Intactivist protest
  • 6 year foreskin restoration progress report
  • SPAMMERS go away!
  • Happy 5th Birthday, RestoringForeskin.org!
  • Circumcision and The Infection Myth

more . . .

Blog Tags

Back pain Barefoot BPH Burn out Catheter Circumcision Circumcision harm Exercise FGM Foreskin Foreskin restoration FR Benefits Growing old Health HoLAP Intactivism Men's Stories Oddities Patent Politics Progress Prostate Pucker Rant Restoring device Retainer Sensitivity Sexual Pleasure Surgery Tugging routine Turkey neck Week in Review Weight Women's Stories

Monthly Archive of Blogs

  • March 2018 (1)
  • August 2017 (1)
  • March 2017 (1)
  • March 2016 (1)
  • March 2015 (1)
  • November 2014 (1)
  • August 2014 (1)
  • April 2014 (1)
  • March 2014 (1)
  • November 2013 (1)
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • next ›
  • last »

Recent Web Links

  • The Anosognosic's Dilemma: Something's Wrong but You'll Never Know What It Is (Part 1)
  • Psychology Today: What Is the Greatest Danger for an Uncircumcised Boy?
  • Sexually Transmitted Infections and Male Circumcision: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
  • YouTube video: Penis: A study of the Human Penis
  • American Urological Association BPH Symptom Index Questionnaire
  • YouTube Video: Child Circumcision: An Elephant in the Hospital
  • Foreskin of the Day picture site
  • Self-ratings of genital anatomy, sexual sensitivity and function in men using the 'Self-Assessment of Genital Anatomy and Sexual Function, Male' questionnaire
  • Not a surgical vaccine: there is no case for boosting infant male circumcision to combat heterosexual transmission of HIV in Australia
  • YouTube Video: Anatomy of the Penis

more . . .

Recent comments

  • Misunderstandings can happen.
    Vicky, I certainly respect your point of view, but it seems you have mistaken my meaning. As a true-equality feminist...
    Naida - 11:22pm Fri, Apr 25, 2014
  • skin bridge
    I am 15 from Georgia in the us. And I also have a skin bridge, I'm thinking about the procedure as well. My main fears...
    Anonymous (not verified) - 1:11pm Thu, Apr 10, 2014
  • My most sincere thank you
    Hello. I'm a 33-year old Finn, who was circumcised 10 days ago due to medical reasons (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki...
    a grateful Finn (not verified) - 7:08pm Sat, Apr 5, 2014
  • Cheaper What?
    ^^ hookah silicon grommet ^^ Wow, the geometry is not the same but the basic idea is similar.  I wonder how...
    TLCTugger (not verified) - 12:01pm Mon, Mar 31, 2014
  • Cheaper
    You can get a hookah silicon grommet and its cheaper than the tlc and its the same material and same shape.
    Anonymous (not verified) - 4:24am Mon, Mar 31, 2014
more

Calendars

Foreskin Restoration Calendar

Intactivist Calendar

Terms of Service | About | Contact

RestoringTally.com is a blog addressing Men's issues, particularly prostate problems and circumcised men who are restoring their foreskins.

Tell someone you love how nice it is to have a foreskin.