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Ethics of non-therapeutic child circumcision

784 bytes added, 13:58, 28 May 2023
The emerging consensus on surrogate consent for non-therapeutic newborn, infant, and child circumcision: Add text.
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Text Bioethicists Myers & Earp (2020) exhaustively reviewed the evidence for and against the alleged health benefits to be addeda healthy person claimed for non-therapeutic circumcision of a neonate, infant or child. They balanced this against the [[pain]], [[trauma]], and loss of body tissue and function. They concluded the claimed health benefits do not support a surrogate's consent for non-therapeutic circumcision. Given this, only the subject can grant consent for a non-therapeutic circumcision, after he reaches the right age for circumcision, which does not occurs until a male reaches the age of consent in his jurisdiction which may vary from 16 to 18 years of age. The present practice in the [[United States]] and elsewhere of parental consent for non-therapeutic circumcision is entirely unethical.<ref name="myers2020">{{REFjournal
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