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Overview
- At the Cutting edge - male circumcision and HIV
IRIN In-Depth
July 20, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73184
Is mass male
circumcision the new big thing in HIV prevention, or is it a risky
social experiment that threatens to divert funding from tried and
tested interventions?
UNAIDS is careful in
its assessment: "Without question, we absolutely have to ensure
that men and women are aware that male circumcision is not a 'magic
bullet'; it doesn't provide total protection and it doesn't mean
people can stop taking the safe sex precautions they were already
using."
The caution is a response
to the excitement - and debate - triggered by the results of three
randomised trials in South Africa, Kenya and Uganda in 2005 and
2006, which seemed to demonstrate that circumcision reduced the
risk of HIV infection among men by between 50 percent and 60 percent.
After the slow slog of
behaviour-change messaging, here was a simple medical procedure
- already widely accepted in many African cultures - that could
have a significant impact on HIV acquisition. A broad front of UN
agencies, key US-based donors and, recently, African health ministers,
have been rallying around an endeavour to make the foreskin history.
Dissent
But there are voices
of dissent among some social scientists and researchers. They argue
that there is not enough incontrovertible evidence to rush to scale-up
circumcision (it is still not even certain how a foreskin increases
the risk of HIV infection); and why in South Africa, for example,
there does not seem to be a significant difference in prevalence
between communities that circumcise, and those that do not.
Frustration over the
slow headway made by orthodox AIDS programmes has resulted in "a
desperation to find something that works, with a growing lobby for
biomedical intervention", Prof Peter Aggleton, a researcher
at the University of London, told IRIN/PlusNews. "It involves
the construction of an agenda that claims to be evidence-based but
where the jury is still out."
The danger
that men will see circumcision as a quick-fix snip, ignoring public
health exhortations to also condomise and reduce partners, is acknowledged
by both sides of the debate. But the dissidents question why any
potential dilution of the latex message should be risked when condoms
provide close to 90 percent protection, and it has been such a struggle
in the first place to persuade men to put them on.
For Richard Delate, communications
director of the South African health and education programme of
Johns Hopkins University, circumcision is simply an additional prevention
method. "But we need to give men a choice ... and circumcision
provides an entry point where we can enbgage men to talk about their
penises in relation to sexual and reproductive health."
Despite almost a quarter
of a century of AIDS awareness programmes, consistent condom use
remains frustratingly low, he points out.
But circumcision is not
just a medical or cosmetic procedure - for many men it is loaded
with significance related to identity and manhood. Social scientists,
who feel they have been sidelined in the debate, argue that it is
also deeply political, serving as a marker for status, power and
social differentiation.
Culture
changes
Can a mass rollout work
among men in ethnically mixed societies, where foreskins - or their
absence - are shorthand for kinship, culture and, almost inevitably,
chauvinism? Delate is clear that culture can change: South Africa's
Zulus, who used to be circumcised, obeyed a decree by King Shaka
sometime in the 19th century and stopped.
"We need to work
with traditional structures to explain to them, engaging not just
on circumcision but HIV in general," Delate said.
In societies that do
cut, traditional rites are imbued with far more meaning than just
removing the foreskin: it is an initiation into manhood where cultural
and behavioural codes are passed on, which could also have an important
bearing on HIV transmission.
Northern Zambia,
where circumcision is the norm, has the lowest HIV prevalence in
the country. But, according to Mutamba Simapuka of the Maina Soko
Military Hospital in the capital, Lusaka, the protective benefits
are more than biomedical; young men also receive lessons on fidelity
in sexual relationships imparted to initiates.
When northern men migrate
to Lusaka, with its looser sexual mores, "their prevalence
rates equate with the local population", Simapuka told IRIN/PlusNews.
Traditional methods of cutting, however, are not the safest way
to perform the procedure; the point, afterall, is for the initiates
to prove their fortitude and endurance. Issues of consent are also
a problematic area. "To ensure safe and clean operations, male
circumcision should only be performed by well-trained practitioners
in sanitary settings under conditions of informed consent, confidentiality,
proper counseling and safety," is the politically correct advise
from UNAIDS.
In the end it boils down
to money. Circumcision adds a newly found option for HIV protection,
but health services in Africa are already overburdened, under-resourced
and struggling to provide even the most basic care. Should circumcision
be added to that load?
A concern among dissidents
is that new financing might be dangled in front of governments to
promote adoption, which would "undermine the existing comprehensive
and balanced approach to HIV", according to Aggleton.
The contrary concern
is that there will not be enough money. "We will have to look
at resourcing to beef up the capacity of health systems, which would
have an added benefit [beyond circumcision]," Delate stressed.
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