Hmm. Personally, I care about the motivations of people I trust to advise me. Different strokes for different folks, I guess.
So, you have in-depth conversations with all of your medical providers as to their personal code of ethics? They're already bound by a professional code and are subsequently held to those standards and the quality of care they provide you evidences whether or not they are serious about the oaths and codes they're bound to.
Do you take it a step further and dig into their personal lives to ensure that the dentist doing your root canal is doing it for the right reasons? Or the physician checking your prostate doesn't have a personal fetish for prostates?
Trust is built primarily upon the level of care provided and the patient/physician relationship established.
Yes, you should be able to trust your physician and trust is usually established through the cultivation of a relationship. Honest communication is vital and I believe I've reiterated the importance of this.
If I'm contemplating surgery for my child - any surgical procedure - the skill and performance record of the physician and their presence and feedback, mean more to me vs. their personal opinions on the procedure.
We expect our politicians to separate their religious views from their political office. Why is it harder for a medical professional to put their personal views aside and do their job?
Would you change your position if the APA changed their position to be more in line with that of the CPS (and numerous other medical associations)?
The APA isn't the sole driver in my decision making. I had an opinion on infant circumcision before visiting the APA's site. Absolutely, if the APA changed it's position, I think it important to understand why.
For me to think that routine circumcision of infants was a good idea, a few things would need to be shown:
- that the benefits of circumcision significantly outweigh its associated risks and harm
- that these benefits can't be achieved by other less invasive means
- that there's a compelling reason not to wait until the boy is old enough to consent
Completely rational.
They're absolutely pushing an agenda: that both positions on the issue are reasonable and defensible.
Both positions are reasonable and defensible.
So you don't deny that a conflict of interest is present; you just trust that doctors are virtuous enough to do the right thing.
I acknowledge that you can hold very staunch opinions and biases and still do your job appropriately. I do it everyday.
Doctors also take oaths to follow their medical associations' codes of ethics, and a prohibition against conflicts of interest is a standard item in these codes.
This should be as challenging for you to debate as it is for me, as we can't measure these conflicts of interest. They are assumed. The "severity" of them are also assumed. Again, I think it's quite reasonable for someone to hold a strong opinion about something but separate their personal views from their job responsibilities. I have to do it all the time in my line of work.
There's a difference between having personal objections to or being overtly gung-ho over a procedure due to personal interpretation and experience vs. serving on anti-circumcision boards or "campaigning" in either direction of the controversy.
Any way you slice it, we can't measure this. So, we have to use common sense and advocate for ourselves.
And either the pediatricians advising those parents or the parents themselves will be informed by the extant body of research on circumcison. It's ridiculous to argue that the quality of the studies that make up this body of research doesn't matter.
There are comparable stats that you'll find from the "for" and "against" sides. I don't really understand what you're fishing for here. I think a couple has access to enough information to make an informed choice, personally.
And if you disagree, we're at a stalemate. I have nothing more to comment in this regard.
But should it have? That's the question.
Should it have what? Changed to a statement that you would have found more favorable? I'm quite pleased with their stance, as it leaves the decision making in the court of parents, neither recommending the procedure or swaying parents to foego. You argue that this isn't what the policy statement achieves. You insist that there's an agenda being pushed. Either "side" can find what they need to justify their decisions.
I'm glad you acknowledge that circumcision is unnecessary. Along with conflict of interest, the AMA Code of Medical Ethics covers this issue:
AMA's Code of Medical Ethics
Exactly how are parents who choose to circumcise their baby sons "held accountable for their decisions"?
You're funny. I love it when you misrepresent my meaning.
It's not a medically necessary procedure, but, unlike earlobe piercing, there is statistical data to support medical benefit.
As a Mom, if I make a poor decision for my child, accountability is immediate. The majority of side effects/complications that are no-dispute, linked to cirumcision are going to manifest shortly after the procedure. Your grown son's failure to get an erection and lessened sensitivity may or may not be attributed to his circumcision as his uncircumsised friends could have the same issues.