Straight Talk about Male Circumcision

Adult male circumcision is being pushed as the latest magic bullet for the HIV pandemic -- and there's reason for enthusiasm. But circumcision will not guarantee that men won't contract HIV or that their female partners are protected.

Adult male circumcision is being pushed as the latest magic bullet for the HIV pandemic. There is good reason
for the enthusiasm about a new use for the world’s oldest surgical intervention.
But let’s be clear about what circumcision will and will not offer a man and
his partner or partners.

Circumcision programs have captured the attention and funding of governments
in East and Southern Africa, global funders, and policymakers. Job postings for
"male circumcision specialists" are circulating, and the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation
and the President’s Plan for
AIDS Relief (PEPFAR)
, two of the largest funders of global HIV/AIDS
programs, have incorporated male circumcision work into their efforts.

First, the good news: Three
recent
trials
have shown that circumcised men are about half as likely to contract HIV from
unprotected vaginal intercourse as their uncircumcised counterparts. Circumcision
also protects against some other sexually transmitted infections (STIs).

But the reality is that circumcision offers only partial
protection. A circumcised man still has a significant risk of contracting HIV
and other STIs if he engages in unprotected sex with an infected partner. Circumcision
does not offer the man’s current female partners any protection from contracting HIV.

On a larger scale, the predictive
models
that show a significant reduction in the number of new HIV infections assume
that between that 80 to 100 percent of men are circumcised. Currently
approximately 30
percent of men worldwide are circumcised
, although this varies widely
between different communities and countries.

Surveys have shown that many
men are willing to be circumcised
, and the promise of surgical prevention
may bring throngs of men into local clinics that do not routinely use health
services. It would be shortsighted not to couple circumcision services with education
on HIV prevention and safe sex, provider-initiated
HIV counseling and testing
, and referrals to HIV/AIDS care and treatment.

But given the protection that circumcision provides, men may assume and assert that
they are "safe" and insist on having sex without condoms. There
are questions about whether newly circumcised men will be willing to abstain
from sex for the six weeks necessary for the wound to heal so as to not possibly
increase their or their partner(s) risk of contracting HIV or other STIs.

In the communities where the demand for circumcision is high and resources
are scarce, unqualified circumcisers may begin offering the surgery to meet men’s
demands. It would take only a very few unqualified safe surgeons to taint the
safety and acceptability of these programs. We cannot allow this to happen.

Clearly, circumcision is an imperfect solution to HIV prevention. Even
so, it promises to be one of the most effective strategies we currently have to
curb new HIV infections in men.

So, what about those of us who never had a foreskin?

By the most optimistic predictions, male circumcision will not translate
into fewer HIV infections in women for decades. The reality of HIV and the
epidemic is that women account for the majority of people living with HIV in
the most affected region, Sub-Saharan Africa. For biological reasons, a woman
is between two to eight times more likely than a man
to contract HIV during
vaginal intercourse with an HIV-positive partner.

On top of women’s biologic predilection to infection, gender inequalities
have sustained and feminized the epidemic by limiting women’s abilities to
negotiate safe sex, refuse unwanted sex, and ask their partners to be
monogamous. We must be cautious about how male circumcision may change these
realities.

Too often women are blamed for bringing HIV into the household. They are cast out of
their homes, subjected to discrimination and violence, and shunned by their
communities
. Will circumcised men be
more likely to blame their female partner(s) if either of them becomes
HIV-positive? As fewer men contract HIV, will it increasingly be seen as a
women’s disease and become more stigmatized? Will women living with HIV become more
vulnerable to violence and abandonment than they already are?

The Way Forward
Male circumcision offers new hope that more men can remain HIV-negative, and
this advance is good news for men and potentially good news for women. But it
would be inexcusable if we allow a potentially positive advance in HIV
prevention for men to harm women.

Women’s health advocates, including those who met at the Expert Consultation on Male Circumcision
and HIV Prevention: Implications for Women
, are recommending that
investments in male circumcision be matched by concurrent investments that
directly benefit women. Among these investments is sexuality
education
, which teaches young women and
men
how to communicate with their partners about safe sex, to establish
equality in relationships, and to respect the right to consent in sex and
marriage. And, in this age of rising HIV infections, it teaches young people how
to protect themselves and each other.

Sexuality education takes us part of the way by equipping women with the
skills to negotiate safe sex, but we must also ensure women have access to male
and, in particular, female condoms. As the only existing woman-initiated method
of HIV prevention, female condoms offer women a way to protect themselves when
faced with a circumcised partner who refuses to use a male condom. Current
supplies of male and female condoms do not satisfy the global demand. But the female
condom shortage is particularly dire: there are 700 male condoms for every
female condom. Protecting women in a climate of male-focused prevention means we
must make a meaningful commitment to promoting and widely distributing the
female condom.

Although the main beneficiaries of male circumcision will be men in the near
and medium term, we must not lose sight of the fact that women are stakeholders
in these programs. Before these programs ramp up, women’s health groups,
including women living with HIV, should be involved in the analysis of how
circumcision will affect women. Once the programs kick off, they should be
closely monitored and evaluated in collaboration with these women’s health
groups. We must also initiate new research into what biomedical, structural,
and behavioral interventions can best help women protect themselves from HIV
infection such as microbicides.

Perhaps the most important thing we can do before the snipping begins is to communicate
honestly about what male circumcision will, and won’t, do for a man and his female
partner(s). We should undertake public education campaigns and individual and
couples counseling to ensure that women and men understand that:

  • Circumcision does not completely protect men
    from HIV. Circumcised men should continue using condoms to protect themselves
    and their partner(s) from infection.
  • Having sex with a circumcised man does not
    protect his female partners from HIV. Partners of circumcised men should
    continue to insist on safe sex.
  • Men must abstain from sex for a full six weeks
    after circumcision to protect themselves and their partners.
  • A man who is already circumcised is not
    necessarily HIV-negative, and if he is, there is no guarantee he will remain
    so.

Male circumcision is not a vaccine, and it is not a
cure-all. It is simply one of the best ways to prevent HIV infections in men,
right now. But we cannot overlook the fact that circumcised men, and their
partners, are still vulnerable to HIV.