No; however, doctors are terrified of lawsuits. Trust me. I have a brain surgeon in the family, and he spends almost 20% of his salary on malpractice insurance. And you KNOW that a doctor refusing to perform circumcision would be risking a lawsuit for "religious bias" or something like that.
And Pedersen, birth control is a medication prescribed by a doctor, to be dispensed by a pharmacy. I know that's sarcasm, but in case anyone actually thinks that argument is legitimate, I thought I'd address it. Giving a DOCTOR the freedom to make a medical choice is different from giving a pharmacist the ability to second-guess a woman's doctor despite not having the same credentials, and specifically FOR reasons of religion-- rather than refuse to perform a procedure done for reasons of religion, because the doctor feels it's unsafe.
I don't think banning circumcision is smart. There is insufficient evidence that it does any substantial harm other than MAYBE reducing sensation insignificantly enough that most circumcised men have no complaints whatsoever. There is also some evidence it does good, in that HIV transmission risks are reduced-- and no matter how rarely it's transmitted in vaginal intercourse, when it's YOUR son with HIV, I bet it hurts just as much to find out you've only got a few more years with him. Plus, parents who see it as a religious obligation would just have the procedure done anyway, by a non-doctor, in a less safe way with a higher risk of contamination or a botched surgery, and with no painkillers.
Besides, Pedersen, how do you suggest this be enforced? Government inspections? "Knock knock, take off your son's pants, we need to check to be sure he has a foreskin?"
And Pedersen, birth control is a medication prescribed by a doctor, to be dispensed by a pharmacy. I know that's sarcasm, but in case anyone actually thinks that argument is legitimate, I thought I'd address it. Giving a DOCTOR the freedom to make a medical choice is different from giving a pharmacist the ability to second-guess a woman's doctor despite not having the same credentials, and specifically FOR reasons of religion-- rather than refuse to perform a procedure done for reasons of religion, because the doctor feels it's unsafe.
I don't think banning circumcision is smart. There is insufficient evidence that it does any substantial harm other than MAYBE reducing sensation insignificantly enough that most circumcised men have no complaints whatsoever. There is also some evidence it does good, in that HIV transmission risks are reduced-- and no matter how rarely it's transmitted in vaginal intercourse, when it's YOUR son with HIV, I bet it hurts just as much to find out you've only got a few more years with him. Plus, parents who see it as a religious obligation would just have the procedure done anyway, by a non-doctor, in a less safe way with a higher risk of contamination or a botched surgery, and with no painkillers.
Besides, Pedersen, how do you suggest this be enforced? Government inspections? "Knock knock, take off your son's pants, we need to check to be sure he has a foreskin?"
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