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Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India

BACKGROUND: Although male circumcision (MC) is recommended as an HIV prevention option, the religious, cultural and biomedical dimensions of its feasibility, acceptability and practice in India have not been explored till date. This study explores beliefs, experiences and understanding of the commun...

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Autores principales: Sahay, Seema, Nagarajan, Karikalan, Mehendale, Sanjay, Deb, Sibnath, Gupta, Abhilasha, Bharat, Shalini, Bhatt, Shripad, Kumar, Athokpam Bijesh, Kanthe, Vidisha, Sinha, Anju, Chandhiok, Nomita
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3948789/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24614575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091213
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author Sahay, Seema
Nagarajan, Karikalan
Mehendale, Sanjay
Deb, Sibnath
Gupta, Abhilasha
Bharat, Shalini
Bhatt, Shripad
Kumar, Athokpam Bijesh
Kanthe, Vidisha
Sinha, Anju
Chandhiok, Nomita
author_facet Sahay, Seema
Nagarajan, Karikalan
Mehendale, Sanjay
Deb, Sibnath
Gupta, Abhilasha
Bharat, Shalini
Bhatt, Shripad
Kumar, Athokpam Bijesh
Kanthe, Vidisha
Sinha, Anju
Chandhiok, Nomita
author_sort Sahay, Seema
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although male circumcision (MC) is recommended as an HIV prevention option, the religious, cultural and biomedical dimensions of its feasibility, acceptability and practice in India have not been explored till date. This study explores beliefs, experiences and understanding of the community and healthcare providers (HCPs) about adult MC as an HIV prevention option in India. METHODS: This qualitative study covered 134 in-depth interviews from Belgaum, Kolkata, Meerut and Mumbai cities of India. Of these, 62 respondents were the members of circumcising (CC)/non-circumcising communities (NCC); including medically and traditionally circumcised men, parents of circumcised children, spouses of circumcised men, and religious clerics. Additionally, 58 registered healthcare providers (RHCPs) such as general and pediatric surgeons, pediatricians, skin and venereal disease specialists, general practitioners, and operation theatre nurses were interviewed. Fourteen traditional circumcisers were also interviewed. The data were coded and analyzed in QSR NUD*IST ver. 6.0. The study has not explored the participants' views about neonatal versus adult circumcision. RESULTS: Members of CC/NCC, traditional circumcisers and RCHPs expressed sharp religious sensitivities around the issue of MC. Six themes emerged: Male circumcision as the religious rite; Multiple meanings of MC: MC for ‘religious identity/privilege/sacrifice’ or ‘hygiene’; MC inflicts pain and cost; Medical indications outweigh faith; Hesitation exists in accepting ‘foreign’ evidence supporting MC; and communication is the key for acceptance of MCs. Medical indications could make members of NCC accept MC following appropriate counseling. Majority of the RHCPs demanded local in-country evidence. CONCLUSION: HCPs must educate high-risk groups regarding the preventive and therapeutic role of MC. Communities need to discuss and create new social norms about male circumcision for better societal acceptance especially among the NCC. Feasibility studies on MC as an individual specific option for the high risk groups in health care setting needs to be explored.
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spelling pubmed-39487892014-03-13 Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India Sahay, Seema Nagarajan, Karikalan Mehendale, Sanjay Deb, Sibnath Gupta, Abhilasha Bharat, Shalini Bhatt, Shripad Kumar, Athokpam Bijesh Kanthe, Vidisha Sinha, Anju Chandhiok, Nomita PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Although male circumcision (MC) is recommended as an HIV prevention option, the religious, cultural and biomedical dimensions of its feasibility, acceptability and practice in India have not been explored till date. This study explores beliefs, experiences and understanding of the community and healthcare providers (HCPs) about adult MC as an HIV prevention option in India. METHODS: This qualitative study covered 134 in-depth interviews from Belgaum, Kolkata, Meerut and Mumbai cities of India. Of these, 62 respondents were the members of circumcising (CC)/non-circumcising communities (NCC); including medically and traditionally circumcised men, parents of circumcised children, spouses of circumcised men, and religious clerics. Additionally, 58 registered healthcare providers (RHCPs) such as general and pediatric surgeons, pediatricians, skin and venereal disease specialists, general practitioners, and operation theatre nurses were interviewed. Fourteen traditional circumcisers were also interviewed. The data were coded and analyzed in QSR NUD*IST ver. 6.0. The study has not explored the participants' views about neonatal versus adult circumcision. RESULTS: Members of CC/NCC, traditional circumcisers and RCHPs expressed sharp religious sensitivities around the issue of MC. Six themes emerged: Male circumcision as the religious rite; Multiple meanings of MC: MC for ‘religious identity/privilege/sacrifice’ or ‘hygiene’; MC inflicts pain and cost; Medical indications outweigh faith; Hesitation exists in accepting ‘foreign’ evidence supporting MC; and communication is the key for acceptance of MCs. Medical indications could make members of NCC accept MC following appropriate counseling. Majority of the RHCPs demanded local in-country evidence. CONCLUSION: HCPs must educate high-risk groups regarding the preventive and therapeutic role of MC. Communities need to discuss and create new social norms about male circumcision for better societal acceptance especially among the NCC. Feasibility studies on MC as an individual specific option for the high risk groups in health care setting needs to be explored. Public Library of Science 2014-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3948789/ /pubmed/24614575 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091213 Text en © 2014 Sahay et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sahay, Seema
Nagarajan, Karikalan
Mehendale, Sanjay
Deb, Sibnath
Gupta, Abhilasha
Bharat, Shalini
Bhatt, Shripad
Kumar, Athokpam Bijesh
Kanthe, Vidisha
Sinha, Anju
Chandhiok, Nomita
Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India
title Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India
title_full Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India
title_fullStr Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India
title_full_unstemmed Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India
title_short Community and Healthcare Providers' Perspectives on Male Circumcision: A Multi-Centric Qualitative Study in India
title_sort community and healthcare providers' perspectives on male circumcision: a multi-centric qualitative study in india
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3948789/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24614575
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091213
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