User:Guarapiranga/Draft:List of countries by prevalence of genital cutting

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In males, circumcision consists of removing the prepuce of the penis (the foreskin). Circumcision is practiced on young Muslim boys (known as khitan) and on newborn Jewish infants (known as brit milah), as well as on non-Jewish or Muslim infants in the United States as a hospital procedure.[1][2] It used to be, but is no longer, a common procedure in Australia[3] and Canada.[4][5] Circumcision for cosmetic reasons is banned in public hospitals in Australia.[6]

The procedures of female genital mutilation (FGM) are significantly more extensive.[7] FGM has no medical benefits and can cause serious harm to women's physical and mental health, depending on the procedure and whether it was performed by traditional cutters or medical personnel.[8] Known until the early 1990s as "female circumcision", the World Health Organization (WHO) and other agencies began referring to it as "female genital mutilation" to remove any analogy to male circumcision.[9][7] It is outlawed around the world, including in many of the countries in which it is most heavily concentrated.[10] Found mainly in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, the practice is divided by the WHO into four types:[8]

  • Type 1 (clitoridectomy) is the partial or total removal of the clitoral glans; "in very rare cases", according to the WHO, it involves removal of the clitoral hood only (the prepuce, or skin around the clitoral glans).
  • Type 2 (excision) is the partial or total removal of the clitoral glans, inner labia, and sometimes the outer labia.
  • Type 3 (infibulation) is the removal of the inner and outer labia and the creation of a seal over the vagina by stitching the two sides or by otherwise allowing them to bond, leaving a small hole for the passage of urine and menstrual blood; this is performed with and without clitoridectomy.
  • Type 4 is "all other harmful procedures to the female genitalia for non-medical purposes, e.g. pricking, piercing, incising, scraping and cauterizing the genital area".[8]

Maps[edit]

Prevalence of genital cutting by sex, age and country
Age Male Female
0-14
15+

Table[edit]

Prevalence of genital cutting by sex, age and country[a]
Country Male Female
0-14 15+ Banned 0-14[b] 15+ Banned
 Afghanistan [13] 98
.1 [14] 99
.1 No Yes
 Albania [14] 31
.5 [14] 36
.8 No Yes
 Algeria 97
.9 [11] 97
.9 No [15] 0 [15] 0 Yes
 American Samoa 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Andorra 1
.1 [11] 1
.1 No Yes
 Angola [14] 96
.1 [14] 96
.2 No Yes
 Anguilla 0
.3 [11] 0
.3 No Yes
 Antigua and Barbuda 0
.6 [11] 0
.6 No Yes
 Argentina 2
.9 [11] 2
.9 No Yes
 Armenia 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Aruba 0
.46 [11] 0
.46 No Yes
 Australia [16][17][18] 15
.9 [19] 58 No Yes
 Austria 5
.8 [11] 5
.8 No Yes
 Azerbaijan 96
.9 [14] 96
.9 No Yes
 Bahamas 0
.2 [11] 0
.2 No Yes
 Bahrain 81
.2 [11] 81
.2 No Yes
 Bangladesh 93
.2 [20] 93
.2 No Yes
 Barbados 0
.9 [11] 0
.9 No Yes
 Belarus 0
.32 [11] 0
.32 No Yes
 Belgium 22
.6 [21] 22
.6 No Yes
 Belize 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Benin [14] 95
.5 [14] 94
.7 No [12] 0
.2 [12] 9 Yes
 Bermuda 0
.8 [11] 0
.8 No Yes
 Bhutan 1
.0 [11] 1
.0 No Yes
 Bolivia 0
.11 [11] 0
.11 No Yes
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 41
.6 [11] 41
.6 No Yes
 Botswana 15
.1 [22][23] 15
.1 No Yes
 Brazil 1
.3 [24] 1
.3 No Yes
 British Virgin Islands 1
.2 [11] 1
.2 No Yes
 Brunei 51
.9 [11] 51
.9 No Yes
 Bulgaria 13
.4 [11] 13
.4 No Yes
 Burkina Faso [14] 85
.1 [14] 88
.7 No [12] 13 [12] 76 Yes
 Burundi [14] 19
.3 [14] 41
.6 No Yes
 Cape Verde 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Cambodia 2
.1 [14] 2
.1 No Yes
 Cameroon [14] 94
.9 [14] 94 No [14] 1
.5 [12] 1 Yes
 Canada 31
.9 [25] 31
.9 No Yes
 Cayman Islands 0
.2 [11] 0
.2 No Yes
 Central African Republic 63
.0 [26] 63
.0 No [12] 1 [12] 24 Yes
 Chad 96
.5 [14] 96
.5 No [12] 10 [12] 38 Yes
 Chile 0
.2 [11] 0
.21 No Yes
 China 14
.0 [27] 14
.0 No Yes
 Christmas Island 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Cocos (Keeling) Islands 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Colombia 1
.5 [28] 1
.5 No [29] 0
.47 [29] 0
.47 Yes
 Comoros [14] 100
.0 [14] 99
.5 No [30] 0 [30] 0 Yes
 DR Congo [14] 95
.2 [14] 97
.2 No Yes
 Congo [14] 100
.0 [14] 99
.2 No Yes
 Cook Islands 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Costa Rica 0
.15 [11] 0
.15 No Yes
 Ivory Coast [14] 94
.0 [14] 96
.7 No [12] 10 [12] 37 Yes
 Croatia 1
.34 [11] 1
.34 No Yes
 Cuba 0
.11 [11] 0
.11 No Yes
 Curaçao 0
.07 [11] 0
.07 No Yes
 Cyprus 22
.7 [11] 22
.7 No Yes
 Czech Republic 0
.14 [11] 0
.14 No Yes
 Denmark 5
.3 [31][32] 5
.3 No Yes
 Djibouti 96
.5 [26] 96
.5 No [12] 49 [12] 93 Yes
 Dominica 0
.2 [11] 0
.2 No Yes
 Dominican Republic 12
.7 [14] 12
.7 No Yes
 Ecuador 0
.11 [11] 0
.11 No Yes
 Egypt 94
.7 [11] 94
.7 No [12] 14 [12] 87 Yes
 El Salvador 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Equatorial Guinea 87 [33] 87 No Yes
 Eritrea 97
.2 [26] 97
.2 No [12] 33 [12] 83 Yes
 Estonia 0
.25 [11] 0
.25 No Yes
 Ethiopia [14] 94
.7 [14] 91
.7 No [12] 16 [12] 65 Yes
 Falkland Islands 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Faroe Islands 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Fiji 55 [11] 55 No Yes
 Finland 3
.0 [34] 3
.0 No Yes
 France 14 [11] 14 No Yes
 French Polynesia 78 [11] 78 No Yes
 Gabon [14] 100
.0 [14] 99
.2 No Yes
 Gambia 94
.5 [26] 94
.5 No [12] 56 [12] 75 Yes
 Palestine 99
.9 [11] 99
.9 No Yes
 Georgia 10
.6 [11] 10
.6 No Yes
 Germany [35] 10
.9 [36] 6
.7 No Yes
 Ghana [14] 94
.2 [14] 95
.6 No [12] 1 [12] 4 Yes
 Gibraltar 6 [11] 6 No Yes
 Greece 4
.7 [11] 4
.7 No Yes
 Greenland 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Grenada 0
.3 [11] 0
.3 No Yes
 Guam 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Guatemala 2
.9 [14] 2
.9 No Yes
 Guernsey 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Guinea [14] 98
.5 [14] 99
.0 No [12] 45 [12] 97 Yes
 Guinea-Bissau 93
.3 [26] 93
.3 No [12] 29 [12] 45 Yes
 Guyana 12
.1 [14] 12
.1 No Yes
 Haiti [14] 8
.4 [14] 7
.6 No Yes
 Holy See 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Honduras 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Hong Kong 28 [37] 28 No Yes
 Hungary 0
.8 [11] 0
.8 No Yes
 Iceland 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 India 15
.7 [14] 15
.7 No Yes
 Indonesia 92
.5 [33] 92
.5 No [12] 49 [38] 95
.1 Yes
 Iran 99
.7 [11] 99
.7 No Yes
 Iraq 98
.9 [11] 98
.9 No [12] 3 [12] 8 Yes
 Ireland 0
.9 [11] 0
.9 No Yes
 Isle of Man 0
.2 [11] 0
.2 No Yes
 Israel 91
.7 [11] 91
.7 No Yes
 Italy 2
.6 [11] 2
.6 No Yes
 Jamaica 14 [39] 14 No Yes
 Japan 9 [40] 9 No Yes
 Jersey 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Jordan 98
.8 [11] 98
.8 No Yes
 Kazakhstan 56
.4 [11] 56
.4 No Yes
 Kenya [14] 91
.0 [14] 92
.6 No [12] 3 [12] 21 Yes
 Kiribati 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 North Korea 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 South Korea [41] 22
.2 [41] 81
.6 No Yes
 Kosovo 91
.7 [11] 91
.7 No Yes
 Kuwait 86
.4 [11] 86
.4 No Yes
 Kyrgyzstan 91
.9 [14] 91
.9 No Yes
 Laos 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Latvia 0
.4 [11] 0
.4 No Yes
 Lebanon 59
.7 [11] 59
.7 No Yes
 Lesotho [14] 70
.4 [14] 72
.3 No Yes
 Liberia 99
.1 [14] 99
.1 No [12] 44 Yes
 Libya 96
.6 [11] 96
.6 No Yes
 Liechtenstein 4
.8 [11] 4
.8 No Yes
 Lithuania 0
.2 [11] 0
.2 No Yes
 Luxembourg 2
.4 [11] 2
.4 No Yes
 Macau 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 North Macedonia 33
.9 [11] 33
.9 No Yes
 Madagascar [14] 95
.5 [14] 94
.6 No Yes
 Malawi [14] 30
.0 [14] 28
.0 No Yes
 Malaysia 61
.4 [11] 61
.4 No Yes
 Maldives 98
.4 [11] 98
.4 No [14] 13
.4 [14] 18
.5 Yes
 Mali 97
.8 [14] 97
.8 No [12] 73 [12] 83 No
 Malta 0
.3 [11] 0
.3 No Yes
 Marshall Islands 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Mauritania 99
.2 [26] 99
.2 No [12] 51 [12] 67 Yes
 Mauritius 16
.6 [11] 16
.6 No Yes
 Mexico 15
.4 [42] 15
.4 No Yes
 Micronesia 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Moldova [14] 0
.5 [14] 0
.9 No Yes
 Monaco 0
.5 [11] 0
.5 No Yes
 Mongolia 4
.4 [11] 4
.4 No Yes
 Montenegro 18
.5 [11] 18
.5 No Yes
 Montserrat 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Morocco 99
.9 [11] 99
.9 No Yes
 Mozambique [14] 64
.5 [14] 62
.7 No Yes
 Myanmar 3
.9 [14] 3
.9 No Yes
 Namibia [14] 31
.4 [14] 26
.5 No Yes
 Nauru 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Nepal 4
.2 [11] 4
.2 No Yes
 Netherlands 5
.7 [11] 5
.7 No Yes
 New Caledonia 50 [11] 50 No Yes
 New Zealand [43] 10
.0 [44] 33
.0 No Yes
 Nicaragua 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Niger 99
.4 [14] 99
.4 No [14] 1
.2 [12] 2 Yes
 Nigeria 98
.9 [14] 98
.9 No [12] 13 [12] 18 Yes
 Niue 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Norfolk Island 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Northern Mariana Islands 90 [11] 90 No Yes
 Norway 3
.0 [11] 3
.0 No Yes
 Oman 87
.7 [11] 87
.7 No Yes
 Pakistan 96
.4 [11] 96
.4 No Yes
 Palau 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Panama 1
.0 [11] 1
.0 No Yes
 Papua New Guinea 10
.1 [11] 10
.1 No Yes
 Paraguay 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Peru 3
.7 [11] 3
.7 No Yes
 Philippines 91
.7 [11] 91
.7 No Yes
 Pitcairn Islands 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Poland 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Portugal 0
.6 [11] 0
.6 No Yes
 Puerto Rico 0
.14 [11] 0
.14 No Yes
 Qatar 77
.5 [11] 77
.5 No Yes
 Romania 0
.3 [11] 0
.3 No Yes
 Russia 11
.8 [11] 11
.8 No Yes
 Rwanda [14] 11
.9 [14] 27
.7 No Yes
 Saint Barthélemy 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Saint Helena 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Saint Kitts 0
.3 [11] 0
.3 No Yes
 Saint Lucia 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Saint Martin 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Saint Pierre and Miquelon 0
.2 [11] 0
.2 No Yes
 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1
.7 [11] 1
.7 No Yes
 Samoa 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 San Marino 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 São Tomé and Príncipe 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Saudi Arabia 97
.1 [11] 97
.1 No Yes
 Senegal 98
.2 [14] 98
.2 No [12] 14 [12] 23 Yes
 Serbia 3
.7 [11] 3
.7 No Yes
 Seychelles 1
.1 [11] 1
.1 No Yes
 Sierra Leone 99
.4 [14] 99
.4 No [12] 8 [12] 86 No
 Singapore 14
.9 [11] 14
.9 No Yes
 Sint Maarten 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Slovakia 0
.2 [11] 0
.15 No Yes
 Slovenia 8
.5 [45] 8
.5 No Yes
 Solomon Islands 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Somalia 93
.5 [46][47] 93
.5 No [12] 46 [12] 98 Yes
 South Africa [14] 45
.5 [14] 55
.2 No Yes
 South Sudan 23
.6 [48][49] 23
.6 No Yes
 Spain 6
.6 [11] 6
.6 No Yes
 Sri Lanka 8
.5 [11] 8
.5 No Yes
 Sudan 39
.4 [46][26] 39
.4 No [12] 30 [12] 87 No
 Suriname 15
.9 [11] 15
.9 No Yes
 Svalbard 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Swaziland 8
.6 [14] 8
.6 No Yes
 Sweden 5
.1 [11] 5
.1 No Yes
 Switzerland 5
.9 [11] 5
.9 No Yes
 Syria 92
.8 [11] 92
.8 No Yes
 Taiwan 8
.3 [50] 8
.3 No Yes
 Tajikistan 99 [11] 99 No Yes
 Tanzania 80
.4 [14] 80
.4 No [12] 0
.4 [12] 10 Yes
 Thailand 11
.9 [51] 11
.9 No Yes
 East Timor [14] 6
.9 [14] 9
.1 No Yes
 Togo [14] 98
.7 [14] 97
.8 No [12] 0
.3 [12] 5 Yes
 Tokelau 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Tonga 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Trinidad and Tobago 5
.8 [11] 5
.8 No Yes
 Tunisia 99
.8 [11] 99
.8 No Yes
 Turkey 98
.6 [11] 98
.6 No Yes
 Turkmenistan 93
.4 [11] 93
.4 No Yes
 Turks and Caicos Islands 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Tuvalu 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Uganda [14] 33
.2 [14] 45
.3 No [12] 1 [12] 0 Yes
 Ukraine 2
.2 [14] 2
.2 No Yes
 United Arab Emirates 76 [11] 76 No Yes
 United Kingdom [52][53] 3 [54][53] 8
.5 No Yes
 United States [55] 71
.2 [56] 80
.5 No Yes
 Uruguay 0
.62 [11] 0
.62 No Yes
 Uzbekistan 96
.5 [11] 96
.5 No Yes
 Vanuatu 95 [11] 95 No Yes
 Venezuela 0
.3 [11] 0
.3 No Yes
 Vietnam 0
.2 [11] 0
.2 No Yes
 U.S. Virgin Islands 0
.6 [11] 0
.6 No Yes
 Wallis and Futuna 0
.1 [11] 0
.1 No Yes
 Western Sahara 99
.6 [11] 99
.6 No Yes
 Yemen 99
.0 [11] 99
.0 No [14] 18
.5 [12] 19 Yes
 Zambia [14] 18
.3 [14] 21
.6 No Yes
 Zimbabwe [14] 14
.3 [14] 14
.0 No Yes

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Mostly all international data, including that republished by the other two most cited sources here, Morris et al. (2016)[11] and UNICEF,[12] for circumcision and FGM respectively, is from USAID's Demographic and Health Surveys. Wherever possible, the primary, rather than the secondary, source is cited. The prevalence rates reflect the most recent surveys available, and are adjusted for sample biases against age distributions. Cells aggregating data across sexes and ages are without citation and are estimated from segmented data along with each country's age distributions and sex ratio. Data missing or unavailable for FGM is denoted by data-sort-value="" style="background: #ececec; color: #2C2C2C; vertical-align: middle; text-align: center; " class="table-na" | —. Data without citation for prevalence of circumcision among boys aged 0–14 is copied from sourced data for males aged 15 and older, as mostly all ritual circumcisions are done either in childhood, right before puberty (e.g. Islam) or days after birth (e.g. Islam and Judaism).
  2. ^ Figures as reported by the children's mothers.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Wiswell, Thomas E.; Bailis, Stefan A.; Morris, Brian J. (2014-05-01). "Circumcision Rates in the United States: Rising or Falling? What Effect Might the New Affirmative Pediatric Policy Statement Have?". Mayo Clinic Proceedings. 89 (5): 677–686. doi:10.1016/j.mayocp.2014.01.001. ISSN 0025-6196. PMID 24702735. Archived from the original on 2019-10-30. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  2. ^ "Products - Health E Stats - Trends in Circumcision Among Male Newborns Born in U.S. Hospitals: 1979–2010". www.cdc.gov. 2019-06-01. Archived from the original on 2014-01-23. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  3. ^ "Australian circumcision statistics | Circinfo.org". www.circinfo.org. Archived from the original on 2018-10-06. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  4. ^ "Rates of circumcision slashed in past 30 years". The Gazette, Montreal. 2006-03-23. p. A13.
  5. ^ MacDonald, Andrea (2006-03-25). "N.S. circumcisions continue to drop: Province has second-lowest rate in the country". Halifax Daily News.
  6. ^ Press, Australian Associated (2017-02-09). "Protection offered by circumcision does not warrant lifting ban, say doctors". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 2019-06-01. Retrieved 2019-06-01.
  7. ^ a b Nussbaum, Martha (1999). Sex and Social Justice. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 119. ISBN 9780195355017. Archived from the original on 2021-08-28. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  8. ^ a b c "Female genital mutilation". World Health Organization. Archived from the original on 2021-01-29. Retrieved 2019-06-01.
  9. ^ Cappa, Claudia; et al. (July 2013). Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting: A Statistical Overview and Exploration of the Dynamics of Change (PDF). New York: United Nations Children's Fund. pp. 6–7. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-03-17. Retrieved 2019-10-25.
  10. ^ UNICEF 2013, pp. 8–9.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek el em en eo ep eq er es et eu ev ew ex ey ez Morris, Brian J.; Wamai, Richard G.; Henebeng, Esther B.; Tobian, Aaron A. R.; Klausner, Jeffrey D.; Banerjee, Joya; Hankins, Catherine A. (2016-04-04). "Erratum to: Estimation of country-specific and global prevalence of male circumcision". Population Health Metrics. 14: 11. doi:10.1186/s12963-016-0080-6. ISSN 1478-7954. PMC 4820865. PMID 27051352.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link)
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd "Female genital mutilation". UNICEF DATA. Archived from the original on 2019-05-26. Retrieved 2019-05-22.
  13. ^ ICF; Health/Afghanistan, Ministry of Public; Organization/Afghanistan, Central Statistics (2017-01-01). "Afghanistan Demographic and Health Survey 2015". Archived from the original on 2019-07-01. Retrieved 2019-10-25. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd "The DHS Program - Data". www.dhsprogram.com. Archived from the original on 2019-05-25. Retrieved 2019-05-30.
  15. ^ a b Female genital mutilation: Algeria, Andorra, Angola, Australia, Austria, Azerbaijan Archived 2019-08-25 at the Wayback Machine. Archive.ipu.org. Retrieved on 2019-08-28.
  16. ^ "Medicare Australia - Statistics - Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) Item Statistics". medicarestatistics.humanservices.gov.au. Archived from the original on 2022-05-06. Retrieved 2019-05-30.
  17. ^ "Population". www.abs.gov.au. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 2019-05-31. Archived from the original on 2019-05-31. Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  18. ^ Health, Australian Government Department of, The 1 November 2016 MBS (XML, PDF, DOC, ZIP) files are now available to download, Australian Government Department of Health, archived from the original on 2021-02-04, retrieved 2021-01-30
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  20. ^ Sabin, K. M.; Rahman, M.; Hawkes, S.; Ahsan, K.; Begum, L.; Black, R. E.; Baqui, A. H. (September 2003). "Sexually transmitted infections prevalence rates in slum communities of Dhaka, Bangladesh". International Journal of STD & AIDS. 14 (9): 614–621. doi:10.1258/095646203322301077. ISSN 0956-4624. PMID 14511498. S2CID 24695245.
  21. ^ Bronselaer, Guy A.; Schober, Justine M.; Meyer-Bahlburg, Heino F. L.; T'Sjoen, Guy; Vlietinck, Robert; Hoebeke, Piet B. (May 2013). "Male circumcision decreases penile sensitivity as measured in a large cohort". BJU International. 111 (5): 820–827. doi:10.1111/j.1464-410X.2012.11761.x. ISSN 1464-410X. PMID 23374102. S2CID 25379775.
  22. ^ Ayiga, N.; Letamo, G. (December 2011). "Impact of male circumcision on HIV risk compensation through the impediment of condom use in Botswana". African Health Sciences. 11 (4): 550–559. ISSN 1729-0503. PMC 3362967. PMID 22649434.
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Category:Genital modification and mutilation Category:Circumcision Category:Female genital mutilation Category:Female genital mutilation by country Category:Circumcision debate