How much does circumcision alter what a man ultimately feels? Scientific studies aiming to answer this question have been inconclusive.
Now researchers prodding dozens of male penises with a fine-tipped tool have found that the five areas most receptive to fine-touch are routinely removed by the surgery.
The finding, announced today, was detailed in the April issue of the British Journal of Urology (BJU) International.
Circumcision surgery involves the removal of the skin that covers the tip of the penis, called the foreskin. Infant male circumcision is the most common medical procedure in the United States, with an estimated 60 percent of male newborns undergoing the surgery.
Whoa! I am sorry to say it but you have been caught out by a giant hoax!
This study was funded and organized by the anti-circumcision organization NOCIRC. You get it? NOCIRC!
I wonder what they declared under 'conflict of interest'? But then again I suppose it doesn't matter because any number of people seem to have missed that obvious conflict.
Boy, have you been suckered!
Posted by: Joshua Amos | June 18, 2007 at 04:32 AM
Whoa! I am sorry to say it but you have been caught out by a giant hoax!
This study was funded and organized by the anti-circumcision organization NOCIRC. You get it? NOCIRC!
I wonder what they declared under 'conflict of interest'? But then again I suppose it doesn't matter because any number of people seem to have missed that obvious conflict.
Boy, have you been suckered!
Posted by: Joshua Amos | June 18, 2007 at 04:34 AM
It doesn't matter who funded the research, the research is valid and the conclusions stand.
Posted by: Steve Rosenthal | August 06, 2007 at 08:57 AM