Circumcision Columbus MS

Circumcision is the cutting off of the fold of skin that normally covers the glans, or head, of the penis. This double layer of skin, the prepuce, is commonly known as the foreskin. In a circumcision, a baby boy is spread-eagled on his back on a board or table; his arms and legs are strapped down so that he can't move. The baby's genitals are scrubbed and covered with antiseptic.

Robert Dale Voller, MD
(662) 377-2808
369 Motley Rd
Columbus, MS
Specialties
Anesthesiology, Pediatrics
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Ne Coll Of Med, Omaha Ne 68198
Graduation Year: 1975

Data Provided by:
Dr. Charles Mitchell Holland
(601) 835-2100
1515 Military Rd
Columbus, MS
Specialty
Pediatrics

Baird Behavioral Health
(662) 327-7388
815 2nd Avenue North
Columbus, MS
 
McCain Reynolds P MD
(662) 327-2700
516 Lincoln Road
Columbus, MS
 
Dr. Jacqueline Hampton
(773) 737-5400
255 Baptist Blvd
Columbus, MS
Specialty
Pediatrics

Charles Mitchell Holland, MD
(601) 835-2100
1515 Military Rd
Columbus, MS
Specialties
Pediatrics, Emergency Medicine
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Ms Sch Of Med, Jackson Ms 39216
Graduation Year: 1985
Hospital
Hospital: Kings Daughters Hospital, Brookhaven, Ms
Group Practice: Brookhaven Childrens Clinic

Data Provided by:
Dilworth Meeks Edwin II MD
(662) 327-0901
2403 5th Street North
Columbus, MS
 
Columbus Children's Clinic
(662) 327-8410
2402 5th Street North
Columbus, MS
 
James Danl Bennett III, MD
(601) 328-1254
2475 5th St N
Columbus, MS
Specialties
Ophthalmology, Pediatrics
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Ms Sch Of Med, Jackson Ms 39216
Graduation Year: 1990

Data Provided by:
Golden Triangle Neurology Clinic
(662) 327-2700
516 Lincoln Road
Columbus, MS
 
Data Provided by:

Circumcision

By Karen Burka

By Karen Burka
Issue 132, September/October 2005

Routine infant circumcision continues to be the most commonly performed surgery on children in the US, with about 1.2 million newborn boys circumcised each year.1 The US also continues to be the only industrialized nation that circumcises the majority of its newborn baby boys for nonreligious reasons. The health-based reasons have been criticized and are controversial.2

Despite these facts, the rates of routine infant circumcision (RIC) in the US have steadily declined for more than a decade, and dropped more than 11 percent in just two years (2001-2003), according to the National Center for Health Statistics. Nationally, the average RIC rate fell to 55.9 percent in 2003, the latest year for which statistics are available. The largest decline was in western states, where the rate dropped 23 percent and seven out of ten boys remained genitally intact.3

Several factors are driving this decline, including parents-to-be who are better informed, more doctors and childbirth educators willing to speak out against circumcision, and an influx of immigrants from Asia, South America, and Europe—where RIC is anything but routine—who are not circumcising their newborn sons.

Perhaps most important, grassroots efforts to expose the medical myths and highlight the ethical concerns surrounding circumcision are becoming more widespread and mainstream. Here's what you need to know about circumcision to make an informed decision that can enhance your son's self-esteem and sexual health for the rest of his life.

What is circumcision?
Circumcision is the cutting off of the fold of skin that normally covers the glans, or head, of the penis. This double layer of skin, the prepuce, is commonly known as the foreskin. In a circumcision, a baby boy is spread-eagled on his back on a board or table; his arms and legs are strapped down so that he can't move. The baby's genitals are scrubbed and covered with antiseptic. The foreskin is torn from the glans and slit lengthwise so that the circumcision instrument can be inserted. The foreskin is then cut off.4 Years ago, doctors believed—and told new parents—that babies didn't feel pain, and that therefore circumcision didn't hurt and would be forgotten as the child matured. Today, experts both within and outside the medical community agree that babies do feel pain, and that circumcision is extremely painful for them. Many circumcisions are performed without anesthesia. Most doctors and childbirth educators agree that the administering of the available painkillers—including the most effective, the ring block, which requires four injections—can itself be extremely painful for an infant. And even when anesthesia is administered, it does not completely eliminate the pain.

Increasingly, the trauma experienced by the infant during circumcision is being linked to later childhood intolerance of pain. According to a...

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