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1.
mSphere ; : e0048124, 2024 Jul 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38980067

ABSTRACT

The annual meeting for the Intermountain Branch was held in April 2024 on the campus of Brigham Young University. There were 127 branch members from Utah, Idaho, and Nevada who attended the meeting and were composed of undergraduate students, graduate or medical students, and faculty. This report highlights the diversity of, and the emerging trends in, the research conducted by American Society for Microbiology members in the Intermountain Branch.

4.
Kennedy Inst Ethics J ; 25(1): 1-34, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25843118

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Much of the contemporary debate about the propriety of non-therapeutic circumcision of male infants and boys revolves around the question of risks vs. BENEFITS: With its headline conclusion that the benefits outweigh the risks, the current circumcision policy of the American Academy of Pediatrics [AAP] (released 2012) is a typical instance of this line of thought. Since the AAP states that it cannot assess the true incidence of complications, however, critics have pointed out that this conclusion is unwarranted. In this paper it is argued that the AAP's conclusion is untenable not only for empirical reasons related to lack of data, but also for logical and conceptual reasons: the concept of risk employed-risk of surgical complications-is too narrow to be useful in the circumcision debate. Complications are not the only harms of circumcision: the AAP and other parties debating the pros and cons of circumcision should conceptualize their analysis more broadly as risk of harm vs. prospect of benefit, thereby factoring in the value of the foreskin to the individual and the physical and ethical harms of removing it from a non-consenting child.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male/adverse effects , Circumcision, Male/ethics , Circumcision, Male/psychology , Coitus , Foreskin/physiology , Human Rights , Masculinity , Parental Consent/ethics , Personal Autonomy , Religion and Medicine , Self Concept , Australia , Choice Behavior/ethics , Circumcision, Female/adverse effects , Circumcision, Female/ethics , Circumcision, Female/psychology , Circumcision, Male/history , Coitus/physiology , Coitus/psychology , Ethics, Medical/history , Female , Foreskin/surgery , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Masturbation , Pediatrics/standards , Pediatrics/trends , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Punishment , Rape , Risk Assessment , Societies, Medical , United Kingdom , United States
6.
Glob Public Health ; 10(5-6): 573-88, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25268631

ABSTRACT

In this paper, I discuss the parallels between responses to syphilis in nineteenth century Britain and HIV/AIDS in contemporary Africa. In each case, an incurable disease connected with sexual behaviour aroused fear, stigmatisation and moralistic responses, as well as a desperate scramble to find an effective means of control. In both cases, circumcision of adult males, and then of children or infants, was proposed as the key tactic. In the ensuing debates over the effectiveness and propriety of this approach, three questions occupied health authorities in both Victorian Britain and the contemporary world: (1) Were circumcised men at significantly lower risk of these diseases? (2) If there was evidence pointing to an affirmative answer, was it altered anatomy or different behaviour that explained the difference? (3) Given that circumcision was a surgical procedure with attendant risks of infection, was it possible that circumcision spread syphilis or HIV? I show that in both situations the answers to these questions were inconclusive, argue that circumcision played little or no role in the eventual control of syphilis and suggest that attention to nineteenth century debates may assist contemporary policy-makers to avoid the treatment dead-ends and ethical transgressions that marked the war on syphilis.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male/history , HIV Infections/history , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Syphilis/history , Syphilis/prevention & control , Africa/epidemiology , HIV Infections/epidemiology , HIV Infections/transmission , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Male , Syphilis/epidemiology , Syphilis/transmission , United Kingdom/epidemiology
7.
Can Urol Assoc J ; 8(7-8): 231, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25210542
8.
J Med Ethics ; 39(7): 463-8, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23365468

ABSTRACT

The principle of the child's right to an open future was first proposed by the legal philosopher Joel Feinberg and developed further by bioethicist Dena Davis. The principle holds that children possess a unique class of rights called rights in trust-rights that they cannot yet exercise, but which they will be able to exercise when they reach maturity. Parents should not, therefore, take actions that permanently foreclose on or pre-empt the future options of their children, but leave them the greatest possible scope for exercising personal life choices in adulthood. Davis particularly applies the principle to genetic counselling, arguing that parents should not take deliberate steps to create physically abnormal children, and to religion, arguing that while parents are entitled to bring their children up in accordance with their own values, they are not entitled to inflict physical or mental harm, neither by omission nor commission. In this paper, I aim to elucidate the open future principle, and consider whether it is applicable to non-therapeutic circumcision of boys, whether performed for cultural/religious or for prophylactic/health reasons. I argue that the principle is highly applicable to non-therapeutic circumcision, and conclude that non-therapeutic circumcision would be a violation of the child's right to an open future, and thus objectionable from both an ethical and a human rights perspective.


Subject(s)
Choice Behavior/ethics , Circumcision, Male/adverse effects , Circumcision, Male/ethics , Forecasting , Human Rights , Parenting , Personal Autonomy , Adult , Amish , Cultural Characteristics , Deafness/genetics , Genetic Counseling/standards , Genetic Testing , Human Body , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Jehovah's Witnesses , Male , Parenting/psychology , Politics , Religion and Medicine , Social Values , Supreme Court Decisions , United States
10.
Aust N Z J Public Health ; 35(5): 459-65, 2011 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21973253

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To conduct a critical review of recent proposals that widespread circumcision of male infants be introduced in Australia as a means of combating heterosexually transmitted HIV infection. APPROACH: These arguments are evaluated in terms of their logic, coherence and fidelity to the principles of evidence-based medicine; the extent to which they take account of the evidence for circumcision having a protective effect against HIV and the practicality of circumcision as an HIV control strategy; the extent of its applicability to the specifics of Australia's HIV epidemic; the benefits, harms and risks of circumcision; and the associated human rights, bioethical and legal issues. CONCLUSION: Our conclusion is that such proposals ignore doubts about the robustness of the evidence from the African random-controlled trials as to the protective effect of circumcision and the practical value of circumcision as a means of HIV control; misrepresent the nature of Australia's HIV epidemic and exaggerate the relevance of the African random-controlled trials findings to it; underestimate the risks and harm of circumcision; and ignore questions of medical ethics and human rights. The notion of circumcision as a 'surgical vaccine' is criticised as polemical and unscientific. IMPLICATIONS: Circumcision of infants or other minors has no place among HIV control measures in the Australian and New Zealand context; proposals such as these should be rejected.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Heterosexuality , Australia , Evidence-Based Medicine , HIV Infections/transmission , Humans , Male , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/prevention & control , Sexually Transmitted Diseases/transmission
11.
CMAJ ; 183(11): 1283-4, 2011 Aug 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21825054

Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male , Humans , Male
15.
Med Anthropol Q ; 21(3): 301-23, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17937251

ABSTRACT

In this article, we offer a critical examination of the tendency to segregate discussion of surgical alterations to the male and female genitals into separate compartments--the first known as circumcision, the second as genital mutilation. We argue that this fundamental problem of definition underlies the considerable controversy surrounding these procedures when carried out on minors, and that it hinders objective discussion of the alleged benefits, harms, and risks. We explore the variable effects of male and female genital surgeries, and we propose a scale of damage for male circumcision to complement the World Health Organization's categorization of female genital mutilation. The origins of the double standard identified are placed in historical perspective, and in a brief conclusion we make a plea for greater gender neutrality in the approach to this contentious issue.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Circumcision, Female/ethics , Circumcision, Male/ethics , Sexuality/psychology , Circumcision, Female/adverse effects , Circumcision, Female/psychology , Circumcision, Male/adverse effects , Circumcision, Male/psychology , Cultural Characteristics , Ethical Relativism , Female , Human Rights , Humans , Male , Minors , Sex Factors , Social Values
16.
J Exp Bot ; 56(422): 3129-36, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16246855

ABSTRACT

It is reported here that salicylic acid (SA) is rapidly taken up by Arabidopsis cells, and its uptake is accompanied by media alkalization and cytosolic acidification, and it is inhibited by the ionophore nigericin, suggesting that its import is linked with that of H+ and driven by a proton gradient. Such import and accumulation declined sharply within a narrow physiological pH range (pH 5.7-6.1), corresponding to a reduction in the [H+] of the media from 1.99 micromol l(-1) to 0.79 micromol l(-1). Following the initial uptake, SA was exported back into the media as free SA against a continued [H+]-dependent import. Since the uptake and accumulation of SA declines sharply within a narrow pH range and cell wall alkalization is an early response during incompatible plant/pathogen interactions, the bacterial elicitor harpin(Pss) was used to investigate how SA transport may be modulated during defence responses. Harpin induced a rapid and sustained alkalization of the cell suspension media, reaching the critical pH (pH 5.9-6.1) at which SA import is inhibited at c. 60 min. Such media alkalization corresponded with a reduction in the SA associated with cells co-treated with harpin, and an inhibition of SA uptake in cells pretreated with harpin. Scavengers of ROS, or compounds which generate H2O2 or NO had little effect on the import or net export of SA, suggesting that media alkalization induced by harpin is sufficient to modulate the kinetics of SA transport.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/metabolism , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/pharmacology , Salicylic Acid/metabolism , Alkalies/metabolism , Arabidopsis/cytology , Arabidopsis/drug effects , Cells, Cultured , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Kinetics , Protons , Signal Transduction
17.
N Z Med J ; 118(1218): U1564, 2005 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16027753

ABSTRACT

Although many nineteenth century misconceptions about the foreskin have been dispelled since Douglas Gairdner showed that infantile phimosis was not a congenital defect, other old ideas have proved more persistent. Among the most ubiquitous are the proposition that ritual or religious circumcision arose as a hygiene or sanitary measure; and the related idea that allied troops serving in the Middle East during the Second World War were subject to such severe epidemics of balanitis that mass circumcision was necessary. Both these claims are medical urban myths which should be firmly laid to rest.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male/history , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Balanitis/prevention & control , Culture , Female , Global Health , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Male , Mythology , New Zealand , World War II
18.
J Hist Med Allied Sci ; 60(3): 283-319, 2005 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15917258

ABSTRACT

Although spermatorrhea as a disease entity and an episode in nineteenth-century medical history has received significant scholarly attention over the past decade, many aspects of its nature, origins, and consequences remain obscure. The aim of this article is to indicate its origins in and links with medical anxiety about masturbation and to discuss the therapies devised to treat the condition. Particular attention is given to the work of Claude-Francois Lallemand and his influence on English doctors, especially William Acton, and the implications of their identification of the foreskin as the major risk factor for childhood masturbation and later spermatorrhea. It is further argued that fear of spermatorrhea was an important factor in the acceptance of circumcision as a valid medical intervention in the late nineteenth century.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male/history , Gender Identity , Masturbation/history , Sexuality/history , England , Erectile Dysfunction/history , Erectile Dysfunction/psychology , France , Genitalia, Male , History, 19th Century , Humans , Male , Masturbation/psychology , Sexuality/psychology , Spermatozoa/pathology
20.
Soc Hist Med ; 16(1): 57-78, 2003 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14598817

ABSTRACT

During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries there were two views on the relationship between syphilis and male circumcision: one was that circumcision provided protection against syphilis, another that circumcision was itself a significant source of syphilitic infection. This article reviews this debate, relates the first view to an influential article by Jonathan Hutchinson in 1855 and considers the subsequent use made of his statistics. It is suggested that the original statistics were of dubious value and that the promise of protection against syphilis was an additional argument for doctors who were keen to introduce universal circumcision of male infants for other reasons, the most significant of which was related to the conviction that it would discourage masturbation. The article further considers the controversy over whether Jews were healthier than other peoples, and the interaction among medical, moral, and customary/religious reasons for circumcising boys, and concludes that, while the operation never played any role in the control of syphilis, circumcision was indeed a significant cause of illness and death among male infants before the standardization of aseptic operating techniques.


Subject(s)
Circumcision, Male/history , Physicians/history , Preventive Medicine/history , Syphilis/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , United Kingdom , United States
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