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. 2004 Nov-Dec;24(6):584-601.
doi: 10.1177/0272989X04271039.

A cost-utility analysis of neonatal circumcision

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A cost-utility analysis of neonatal circumcision

Robert S Van Howe. Med Decis Making. 2004 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

A cost-utility analysis, based on published data from multiple observational studies, comparing boys circumcised at birth and those not circumcised was undertaken using the Quality of Well-being Scale, a Markov analysis, the standard reference case, and a societal perspective. Neonatal circumcision increased incremental costs by $828.42 per patient and resulted in an incremental 15.30 well-years lost per 1000 males. If neonatal circumcision was cost-free, pain-free, and had no immediate complications, it was still more costly than not circumcising. Using sensitivity analysis, it was impossible to arrange a scenario that made neonatal circumcision cost-effective. Neonatal circumcision is not good health policy, and support for it as a medical procedure cannot be justified financially or medically.

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