Difference between revisions of "South Korea"
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===Incidence and prevalence=== | ===Incidence and prevalence=== | ||
− | The incidence of circumcision was found to exceed 100 percent, since the number of older males being circumcised, exceeded the birth rate. | + | The incidence of circumcision was found to exceed 100 percent, since the number of older males being circumcised, exceeded the birth rate.<ref name="pang2002" /> |
− | The prevalence of circumcision was 93 percent in the 20-year-old age group and 60 percent over all ages. | + | The prevalence of circumcision was 93 percent in the 20-year-old age group and 60 percent over all ages.<ref name="pang2002" /> |
+ | |||
+ | ===Complaints=== | ||
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+ | Of the 593 men who had had sex prior to their circumcision, 20 percent had complaints of painful erections and reduced sexual pleasure. | ||
==Medical research== | ==Medical research== |
Revision as of 13:03, 7 June 2021
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South Korea, a traditionally non-circumcising nation, nevertheless, adopted the practice of non-therapeutic circumcision during and after the Korean War (1950-53). The adoption of circumcision may be traced to 1950, when the United States intervened in the Korean War and large numbers of mostly circumcised American troops were sent into South Korea to aid in its defense.[1]
Contents
South Korean practice
Recent introduction
A 1971 study of men who were being examined for military service found that only five percent of the men were circumcised. These men must have been born just before or during the Korean War, but were not circumcised, so this indicates that the onset of circumcision is of recent vintage.[2]
Concept of "naturally circumcised"
Korean men have invented several reasons that they do not need a surgical circumcision, such as their foreskin is short, that it retracts when they have an erection, that it is not phimosed, or other reasons. This is called "naturally circumcised".[1]
Usual age for circumcision
Most Korean males are circumcised not in infancy but at puberty, as teenagers or in their 20s, so it is now viewed as a "rite of passage". Circumcision in infancy is rare in South Korea.[1]
Prevalence of circumcision
Kim et al. carried out a survey of men in the Seoul area. They found that in the 16-25 year old age group 91 percent had been circumcised, with lesser percentages with increasing age groups.[1]
Results of large scale survey
Pang & Kim (2002) carried out a large scale survey of 5,434 males, aged 0-92, and 267 practicing physicians to learn more about the effects of male circumcision in South Korea. The authors observed that South Korea is is the only nation in the region where non-therapeutic circumcision of boys is practiced.[3]
Incidence and prevalence
The incidence of circumcision was found to exceed 100 percent, since the number of older males being circumcised, exceeded the birth rate.[3]
The prevalence of circumcision was 93 percent in the 20-year-old age group and 60 percent over all ages.[3]
Complaints
Of the 593 men who had had sex prior to their circumcision, 20 percent had complaints of painful erections and reduced sexual pleasure.
Medical research
Kim & Pang (2007) studied the effect of the foreskin on masturbation. They reported that masturbatory pleasure decreased in 48% of the respondents and increased in 8%, while difficulty increased in 63% but was easier in 37%. They concluded that there was a decrease in masturbatory pleasure after circumcision.[4]
References
- ↑ a b c d Kim DS, Lee JY, Pang MG. Male circumcision: a South Korean perspective. BJU Int. January 1999; 83 Suppl 1: 28-33. PMID. DOI. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
- ↑ Jung KM. A study on the foreskin and circumcision of the penis of Korean male. Korean J Public Health. 1971; 9: 369. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
- ↑ a b c Pang MG, Kim DS. Extraordinarily high rates of male circumcision in South Korea: history and underlying causes. BJU Int. January 2002; 89(1): 48-54. PMID. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
- ↑ Kim, DaiSik, Pang, Myung-Geol. The effect of male circumcision on sexuality. BJU Int. March 2007; 99(3): 619-622. PMID. DOI. Retrieved 6 June 2021.