Four recent cases of neonatal herpes infection following a Jewish circumcision ritual have health officials once again urging parents in New York City’s ultra-Orthodox population to avoid the practice or at least limit its risks.
Health officials on Sunday said there have been three cases of herpes simplex virus 1 infections in infant boys reported to the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene since Dec. 1, 2019. The fourth case was reported in September 2019.
Health officials don’t believe the cases are linked. The infants were hospitalized, received intravenous antiviral drugs and are now recovering, health officials said.
Rabbi David Zwiebel, executive vice president of Agudath Israel of America, declined to comment.
The ritual is known as metzitzah b’peh. A mohel, a religious leader who performs the circumcision during a bris, uses his mouth to suck blood from the cut.
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Since April 2006, when reporting of cases became mandatory, 22 babies were reported to have developed infections following metzitzah b’peh. Two died.
City health officials have struggled through several attempts to stem the religious practice.
Five commissioner’s orders, including one recent one, have been issued since 2014 to mohels. The order prohibits them from engaging in direct orogenital suction. Violating the order is a misdemeanor.
Beginning in 2012, the city required parents to sign a consent form that warned of the ritual’s dangers, which the mohel was then expected to retain. Health officials said the form, which was intended to be educational, eroded trust with the community and was viewed by some members of the community as an intrusion during a sacred gathering.
The form was replaced with an educational brochure in 2015, which is still in use today, according to Demetre Daskalakis, the deputy commissioner for the division of disease control at the city’s health department.
While the city continues to stress that avoiding the practice is the only way to effectively eliminate the risk of herpes transmission, said Dr. Daskalakis, the city is also adopting a new harm-reduction strategy that has been used elsewhere.
Health professionals are being urged to inform parents and religious leaders that steps can be taken to reduce the risk of disease transmission, including asking the mohel to use antiseptic mouthwash immediately before performing direct orogenital suction to reduce viable herpes virus in the saliva. Mohels should also use sterile instruments, antiseptic skin cleanser and hand sanitizer, according to the advisory.
Health department workers over the past month have visited with dozens of clinicians to go over the basics of neonatal herpes and talk about harm-reduction strategies, said Dr. Daskalakis.
Trying to undo a ritual that is thousands of years old is challenging, said Dr. Daskalakis. Offering the option of don’t do it, but also instructions on how to keep an infant healthy, is, he said, “the best we’re going to do.”
The harm-reduction effort is a way to “build a bridge between what is a ritual that doesn’t seem medically OK, to some medical strategies that at least reduce harm,” he said.
Write to Melanie Grayce West at melanie.west@wsj.com
3 comments:
Nice to see the ancient blood letting medical practice is alive and well. Even when it's clearly not part of the ritual and inferior to nowadays antibiotics etc.
In the past it was the best way to get the antibodies in the bloodstream to attack the infection. It was strictly a medical procedure like putting on the bandage after the circumcision.
It's also a great way to show that it's ok for adults to suck kids etc.
"Rabbi David Zwiebel, executive vice president of Agudath Israel of America, declined to comment." Priceless.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloodletting
The original mohel Fisher who was banned by NYC Health has spent years performing secret illegal metzitzos enabled by at least one corrupt, ignorant Rebbela
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passed from person to person through direct
contact.
Children will often contract HSV-1 from early
contact with
an infected adult. They then carry the virus with
them for
the rest of their life.
Infection with HSV-1 can happen from general
interactions
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lip balm, or
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infected
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with a herpes
sore, the AAD reports that most people get
HSV-1 from an
infected person who is asymptomatic, or does
not have
sores.
having multiple sex partners
being female
having another sexually transmitted infection
(STI)
having a weakened immune system
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