Anna Taddio

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Anna Taddio, M.D., is a Toronto-based Canadian medical doctor, author, and researcher into pain of infant male circumcision. Taddio carried out her research at the Hospital for Sick Children.

Taddio's clinical trials revealed short-term and long-term behaviour changes after neonatal circumcision.[1] [2] Taddio et al. (1997) concluded:;

Although postsurgical central sensitisation (allodynia and hyperalgesia) can extend to sites of the body distal from the wound, suggesting a supraspinal effect, the long-term consequences of surgery done without anaesthesia are likely to include post-traumatic stress as well as pain. It is, therefore, possible that the greater vaccination response in the infants circumcised without anaesthesia may represent an infant analogue of a post-traumatic stress disorder triggered by a traumatic and painful event and re-experienced under similar circumstances of pain during vaccination.[2]

Publications

See also

References

  1.   Taddio A, Goldbach M, Ipp M, Stevens B, Koren G. Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain responses during vaccination in boys. Lancet. 1995; 345: 291-292. PMC. DOI. Retrieved 4 November 2022.
  2. a b   Taddio A, Katz J, Ilersich AL, Koren G. Effect of neonatal circumcision on pain response during subsequent routine vaccination. Lancet. 1997; 349: 599-6. PMC. DOI. Retrieved 4 November 2022.