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United States of America

67 bytes removed, 14:44, 19 March 2023
Long-term declining trend: Revise text and Wikify.
Peter Moore (2015) reported that the incidence of circumcision was 55 percent.<ref name="moore2015"/>
Jacobson Jacobsen et al. (2021) collected circumcision statistics used data from the KidsKid' s Inpatient Database of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality from 2002 2003 through 2016 to 2016compare [[intact]] with [[circumcised]] boys in the first 28 days of life. They The authors reported that a gradual declining trend in the incidence of neonatal non-therapeutic neonatal circumcision has "decreased significantly over time" with 55 percent being circumcised, which translates to a [[genital integritycircumcision]] (intact) rate of 45 percent. The previous intact rate for throughout the nation had been reported to be 41.7 percent in 2010, so this represents an improvement of 7.9 percent in the number of intact boysstudy period. The overall incidence of circumcision for the entire United States had declined decreased from 57.4 percent to 52.1 percent at the end of over the 13 year study period (2016), which indicates that 47or 5.9 percent 3 percentage points for an average decrease of boys born in that 0.4 percentage point per year are [[intact]].The author noted "neonatal circumcision rates decreased significantly over time."<ref name="jacobson2021" />
====Midwest====
17,135
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