Posted on 07/05/2005 5:11:03 AM PDT by Paladin2b
In a potentially major breakthrough in the campaign against AIDS, French and South African researchers have apparently found that male circumcision reduces by about 70% the risk that men will contract HIV through intercourse with infected women.
Other than abstinence and safer sex, almost nothing has been proved to reduce the sexual spread of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. World-wide, the major route of HIV transmission for many years has been heterosexual sex.
Vaccine developers have said they would consider an AIDS vaccine with just 30% efficacy useful. But so far, no effective vaccine against the disease has been developed, leaving AIDS workers desperate for another tool to help them stem the tide of new infections, estimated at almost five million last year.
The circumcision findings were so dramatic that the data and safety monitoring board overseeing the research halted the study in February, about nine months before it would have been completed, on the grounds that it would be immoral to proceed without offering the uncircumcised control group the opportunity to undergo the procedure. While men were directly protected from infection by circumcision, women could benefit indirectly because circumcision would reduce the chances their partners would be HIV-positive.
Researchers in the field have been aware of the study's basic findings, but they haven't been published, so most experts haven't evaluated them. The British medical journal the Lancet decided against publishing the study, but for reasons unrelated to the data and scientific content, according to people familiar with the matter. Lancet officials, following standard policy at the journal, refused to comment on why the study was turned down.
The fact that an independent board ordered the study halted is considered a strong sign that the science is sound...
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Your example posted is ridiculous. However, talking about genitals in re AIDS is like, at least, in the same category. Are you posturing a "Women need men like a fish needs a bicycle" type of argument?
Never knew some people took it so seriously.
You are going to give the Arabs all the oil and cut a half invh off WHAT?
Love it! Can everyone say "c-o-v-e-n-a-n-t'!
I don't understand the science here, but I applaud the study to halting to offer the procedure when it clearly is making a huge difference.
Boy, that blows the hygiene factor that the anti-circumcision groups have tried to negate.
Muslims are circumcised as a matter of religious practice. Aren't they in the majority of the population?
Making those who practice depravity 'feel' secure...
spreads diesease just that much faster.....
Their just talking off the top of their head
Little did Abraham know what he was starting when he circumcised Isaac.
nyuk-nyuk
PING! An answer to your question.
Leftists love abortion for these reasons:
1. It enables them to have promiscuous and/or adulterous and/or illicit sex with impunity. If the woman gets pregnant, she can kill the baby and not be a single mother. The man is relieved of any responsibility.
2. It is founded also on a hatred of life. And where does life come from? IOW, it is also founded on envy of God, Who is the author of life.
3. Pure, plain selfishness. My orgasm is important, someone else's very life is meaningless. Extreme selfishness.
4. Homosexuals support abortion (why should they care?) because it symbolizes selfish hedonism, of which they are the poster children.
And Margaret Sanger, the founder of Planned Parenthood, was a great admirer of Hitler, and he of her. Eugenics was the beginning.
I am trying to understand if, on your part, there is a reading comprehension issue at hand as well as clinical and...general knowledge on how the retrovirus is actually being transmitted. If I am wrong, please explain why taking a "head" count (no pun intended) on circumcised patients VS uncircumcised has any effect on finding a cure for any human pathogenic retroviruses. It is simply a study on a social/religious choice ("To circumcise or not to circumcise, that is the question") and it varies from continent to continent. Take Europe for example, where the custom of circumcision is not as followed as it is here or in Middle East. So, going back to my original post, such study continues to be redundant simply because circumcision is not a prevention nor a cure.
It is simply a study on a social/religious choice
Would you also call a study on specifically promiscuous homosexuals in order to collect data in re aids transmission and/or prevention" to be a "study on a social/religious choice"?
I remember a time when the call to study AIDS via blood transmissions (needles) was scoffed and sneered at as "bigoted, anti-homosexual" hysteria. And this after many in the medical communities got "pricked", and tainted blood was sold via Arkansas prisons, for example. Ergo, I do not panick when I see newer angles being looked in the AIDS/HIV issue. Nor do I write them off as simply "blithering moronic" studies. And why not do such a study in Africa where heterosexual aids is more prevalent, than say, here in the US.
YOu got it pal, and GOD bless.
Not long ago I heard it said that conservatives should be happy about abortion because the vast majority of abortions were done by liberals.
Sounded reasonable until I thought maybe those aborted would have been majority conservative after seeing how screwy their parents were.
[...crickets...]
Sabin Russell, Chronicle Medical Writer
Wednesday, July 6, 2005 |
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French and South African AIDS researchers have called an early halt to a study of adult male circumcision to reduce HIV infection after initial results reportedly showed that men who had the procedure dramatically lowered their risk of contracting the virus. The study's preliminary results, disclosed Tuesday by the Wall Street Journal, showed that circumcision reduced the risk of contracting HIV by 70 percent -- a level of protection far better than the 30 percent risk reduction set as a target for an AIDS vaccine. According to the newspaper account, the study under way in Orange Farm township, South Africa, was stopped because the results were so favorable. It was deemed unethical to continue the trial after an early peek at data showed that the uncircumcised men were so much more likely to become infected. All of the men in the study had been followed for a year, and half the men had been followed for the full 21 months called for in the original study design, according to the Wall Street Journal, which obtained a draft copy of the study. Begun in August 2002, the experiment is one of three closely watched clinical trials in Africa to determine whether there is scientific merit to nearly three dozen less rigorously controlled studies showing that circumcised men were much less likely to become HIV-positive. The hope is that, lacking a vaccine, the nearly 5 million new HIV infections occurring each year could be slowed by circumcision, the surgical removal of the foreskin -- a simple, low-cost and permanent medical intervention that is a common but controversial cultural practice in much of the world. In Africa, about 70 percent of men are circumcised at birth or during rite-of-passage ceremonies in early puberty. Medical anthropologists began noticing as early as 1989 that the highest rates of HIV infection in Africa were occurring in regions of the continent where the predominant tribal or religious cultures did not practice circumcision. Adult HIV infection rates above 30 percent are found in Zimbabwe, Botswana, Swaziland and eastern South Africa, where circumcision is not practiced; yet HIV infection rates remain below 5 percent in West Africa and other parts of the continent where circumcision is commonplace. Laboratory studies have found that the foreskin is rich in white blood cells, which are favored targets of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. So the theory is that men who are uncircumcised are much more likely to contract the virus during sex with an infected woman, and that the epidemic spreads when these newly infected men have sex with other women within their network of sexual partners. The lead investigators of the study, Dr. Bertran Auvert of the University of Paris and Adrian Puren of South Africa's National Institute for Communicable Diseases, are not talking. The results were expected to be discussed at an AIDS conference in Rio de Janeiro in three weeks. But word about the findings has been circulating among researchers searching for ways to slow the epidemic. "I would be thrilled if it works, but we will also need the results of other trials,'' said Johns Hopkins University epidemiologist Ronald Gray, who is conducting, in Uganda, one of two other controlled clinical trials of male circumcision. Gray's trial, which has completed enrollment of 5,000 men in the Rakai district of Uganda, is not scheduled to end until 2007. A third trial, under way in Kisumu, Kenya, is still enrolling its quota of 2,700 volunteers and is also expected to be completed in 2007, according to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which is sponsoring it. All three trials were designed to compare the HIV infection rates of two groups of HIV-negative men, one-half of whom would agree to be circumcised, the other to be offered only counseling on AIDS prevention. The studies were designed to show whether or not circumcision provided a statistically significant protective effect of at least 50 percent. The South African study -- if the results are confirmed -- suggests that the level of protection afforded is even higher. Although the apparent protective effect of circumcision has been noted for more than 20 years, doubts linger as to whether circumcision itself is protective, or whether the lower risk may be the result of cultural practices among those who circumcise. HIV rates are low in Muslim communities, for example, which practice male circumcision but also engage in ritual washing before sex and frown on promiscuity. E-mail Sabin Russell at srussell@sfchronicle.com. |
The study's preliminary results, disclosed Tuesday by the Wall Street Journal, showed that circumcision reduced the risk of contracting HIV by 70 percent -- a level of protection far better than the 30 percent risk reduction set as a target for an AIDS vaccine.
According to the newspaper account, the study under way in Orange Farm township, South Africa, was stopped because the results were so favorable. It was deemed unethical to continue the trial after an early peek at data showed that the uncircumcised men were so much more likely to become infected.
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