Philippine Daily Inquirer

Outbreak can’t stop town’s ‘Manhood on Wheels’

- By Maricar Cinco @maricarcin­coinq

Not even the coronaviru­s could stop the traditiona­l “circumcisi­on season” in a town in Cavite province.

But this time, health workers in Carmona have gone to the communitie­s not only to perform the procedure on young boys but also to check them and their immediate family members for symptoms of the coronaviru­s.

Homer Aguinaldo, the municipal health officer, said up to 40 doctors and 40 nurses were usually invited to join the program

called “Manhood on Wheels.”

Under normal circumstan­ces, the local government would offer the free surgery to hundreds of preteen boys, either at the community hospital or the municipal auditorium.

“We actually thought of canceling it this year,’’ Aguinaldo said. “But we realized that we don’t know how it will be next year. We could still be in the same situation—the ‘new normal,’ they say—so we might as well go ahead with it.”

“Besides, we don’t want our [health] programs hampered [by the pandemic] as much as possible,” he added.

Mobile operating room

Since the Luzon lockdown has made mass circumcisi­ons impossible, a smaller medical team has been assembled to go from village to village. The mission rolled out out a “health bus” or a mobile operating room where a fully reclined dental chair serves as an operating table.

Manhood on Wheels has so far circumcise­d about 200 boys in Carmona in the past two weeks out of this year’s target of 600.

Parents can schedule an appointmen­t by calling the local health office or registerin­g online.

For this year’s service, the health workers are taking extra measures in view of the coronaviru­s contagion. In effect, the program is doubling as the local government’s way of closely monitoring the residents’ overall health condition amid the pandemic.

“Before [a boy] gets into the bus, we screen him and everyone in his household (for virus symptoms) by checking their vital signs,” Aguinaldo said.

No to ‘pukpok’

As of Wednesday, Carmona has recorded one confirmed case of the coronaviru­s—but the patient was not among the residents examined by the Manhood on Wheels team.

The program again comes with an educationa­l campaign advising young boys and their parents against the unhygienic, “pukpok” method performed by nonmedical people who use a razor or any sharp blade to remove the foreskin.

Since a newly circumcise­d boy usually takes seven to 10 days to heal, Aguinaldo said, “it gives (these youngsters) another reason to stay home” while the lockdown remains in effect.

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 ??  ?? 2-IN-1 MISSION The free circumcisi­on project of the municipal government of Carmona, Cavite province, serves a dual purpose this year: Putting young boys through the rite of passage to manhood and checking them and their family members for symptoms of the coronaviru­s.
2-IN-1 MISSION The free circumcisi­on project of the municipal government of Carmona, Cavite province, serves a dual purpose this year: Putting young boys through the rite of passage to manhood and checking them and their family members for symptoms of the coronaviru­s.
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