Danish Study Shows Circumcision Before 5-Years-Old Doubles the Risk of Autism and ADHD

Daily Stormer
January 10, 2015

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Regardless of cultural background, circumcised boys may run a greater risk of developing autism and ADHD, a study has claimed.

Circumcision can double the chances of a young boy becoming autistic, yet there are still no calls to outlaw it like there are for female circumcision.

I wonder why that might be.

Daily Mail:

Scientists believe the finding may be linked to stress caused by the pain of the procedure.

The study of more than 340,000 boys in Denmark found that circumcision raised the overall chances of an autism spectrum disorder before the age of 10 by 46 per cent.

But if circumcision took place before the age of five it doubled the risk.

Circumcision also appeared to increase the likelihood of boys from non-Muslim families developing hyperactivity disorder.

The research, published in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, examined more than 340,000 boys born in Denmark between 1994 and 2003.

At the age of nine, their health was tracked – and almost 5,000 cases of ASD were diagnosed.

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The researchers suggest the pain caused by circumcision may be partly to blame, in turn affecting how the brain develops and reacts to stress.

Professor Morten Frisch of the Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, who led the research, said: ‘Our investigation was prompted by the combination of recent animal findings linking a single painful injury to lifelong deficits in stress response…and a study showing a strong, positive correlation between a country’s neonatal male circumcision rate and its prevalence of ASD in boys.

He added: ‘Today it is considered unacceptable practice to circumcise boys without proper pain relief.

‘But none of the most common interventions used to reduce circumcision pain completely eliminates it and some boys will endure strongly painful circumcisions.’

The study goes on to discuss how painful experiences in babies have been shown – both in animal and human studies – to have a long-term effect on pain perception.

This is a characteristic often encountered among children with autism, they add.

Professor Frisch said: ‘Given the widespread practice of circumcision in infancy and childhood around the world, our findings should prompt other researchers to examine the possibility that circumcision trauma in infancy or early childhood might carry an increased risk of serious neurodevelopmental and psychological consequences.

Who could be behind this bizarre practice of systemic ritual child abuse?

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