Interpreting and dismissing the relevance of the “wait and wipe” finding from the circumcision studies conducted in Africa


Autoria(s): Ndebele, P.; Ruzario, S.; Gutsire-Zinyama, R.
Cobertura

Origin of publication: Malawi

Data(s)

15/06/2016

Resumo

Some of the secondary findings from the circumcision studies conducted in Africa, are both interesting and difficult to explain. This paper focuses on the finding that uncircumcised men who waited for ten minutes after sexual intercourse and then wiped their penises using a dry cloth, had lower rates of HIV infection compared to those who cleaned using a wet cloth or those who cleaned within three minutes of having intercourse. The paper also focuses on the finding on men who became infected and yet they reported no sexual acts or 100% condom use. Interpretations that have been provided so far in trying to explain these two interesting findings are somewhat inadequate. Because of the inadequate interpretation that has been provided, anti-circumcision lobbyist are presenting the “wait and wipe strategy” as an alternative to circumcision for HIV prevention. In this paper, we argue that waiting for ten minutes and wiping with a dry cloth does not prevent men from becoming infected by HIV. We therefore attempt to present some alternative views.

Formato

html

Identificador

http://www.bioline.org.br/abstract?id=mm13028

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

College of Medicine, University of Malawi and Medical Association of Malawi

Relação

http://revista.uft.edu.br/index.php/jbb/index; http://www.bioline.org.br/mm

Direitos

Copyright 2013 - Malawi Medical Journal

Fonte

Malawi Medical Journal (ISSN: 1995-7262) Vol 25 Num 4

Tipo

VP