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Medical indication

891 bytes added, 13:37, 23 August 2022
Invalid medical indications
In medicine, operating on living people is only permitted after the (adult) patient has been fully informed about the risks of the operation and has given his/her voluntary consent. In children, there must be an urgent medical indication for the operation. If there is no medical indication, the parents cannot give consent on behalf of their children who are not yet legally capable of giving consent. Otherwise it is a criminal offense. This form of legally inadmissible and therefore non-binding parental consent is regularly present in the case of child [[circumcision]]s that are not medically indicated.
 
== Invalid medical indications ==
A physician will always have to assure himself that his diagnosis is describing a pathological state at all and that all other less invasive treatments have been tried before surgery is made. If a physician e.g. diagnoses [[phimosis]] in a newborn and derives a medical indication for [[circumcision]], that indication is invalid in almost all cases because [[phimosis]] is a natural condition after birth. According to the latest medical guidelines for [[phimosis]] and paraphimosis, most previously misdiagnosed forms of [[phimosis]] are in fact physilogical (natural) and do not require any treatment at all. In addition, parents can always get a second opinion from another doctor.
 
Some doctors, not following the latest standards, still misdiagnose pathologic phimosis in young children so they can operate and have health insurance cover the costs.
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