Difference between revisions of "H. L. Rosenberry"
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In 1894, he published a paper "proving" that circumcision cures urinary and rectal incontinence. | In 1894, he published a paper "proving" that circumcision cures urinary and rectal incontinence. | ||
− | After noting the long foreskin on a boy with incontinence of urine and faeces, he concluded "that the child should be circumcised without delay, as that might account for the dribbling of the | + | After noting the long foreskin on a boy with incontinence of [[urine]] and faeces, he concluded "that the child should be circumcised without delay, as that might account for the dribbling of the [[urine]]”.<ref>{{REFweb |
|url=https://15square.org.uk/medical-history-of-infant-circumcision-the-1800s/ | |url=https://15square.org.uk/medical-history-of-infant-circumcision-the-1800s/ | ||
|title=Medical History Of Infant Circumcision: The 1800’s | |title=Medical History Of Infant Circumcision: The 1800’s |
Revision as of 11:16, 27 December 2021
H. L. Rosenberry from Menominee, MI, was an M.D.[a 1]
In 1894, he published a paper "proving" that circumcision cures urinary and rectal incontinence.
After noting the long foreskin on a boy with incontinence of urine and faeces, he concluded "that the child should be circumcised without delay, as that might account for the dribbling of the urine”.[1]
Eleanor Self (2016) notes that Dr. Rosenberry’s recounted the way in which circumcising a young boy cured his incontinence. He then makes it clear that he is “at a loss to explain the process but simply relate[s] it as fact.” By using his own experiences to explain the merits of circumcision, Rosenberry helps with our understanding of how medical professionals of the time made the case for routine neonatal circumcision.[2]
Publications
- Rosenberry HL. Incontinence of the urine and faeces, cured by circumcision. Medical Record (New York). 11 August 1894; 46(6): 173.
Abbreviations
- ↑
Doctor of Medicine
, Wikipedia. Retrieved 14 June 2021. In the United Kingdom, Ireland and some Commonwealth countries, the abbreviation MD is common.
References
- ↑
Medical History Of Infant Circumcision: The 1800’s
, 15 Square. Retrieved 12 October 2021. - ↑ Self, Eleanor. The Rise of Circumcision in Victorian America . The Alexandrian. 2016; 5(1) Retrieved 12 October 2021.