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  1. Home
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Browsing by Author "Ssebanenya, William"

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    Use of a mixture of lignocaine and bupivacaine vs lignocaine alone for male circumcision under local anaesthesia in Rakai, Uganda
    (BJU international, 2012) Kigozi, Godfrey; Musoke, Richard; Anyokorit, Margaret; Nkale, James; Kighoma, Nehemiah; Ssebanenya, William; Mwinike, Joshua; Watya, Stephen; Nalugoda, Fred; Kagaayi, Joseph; Nalwoga, Grace; Nakigozi, Gertrude; Kiwanuka, Noah; Makumbi, Frederick; Lutalo, Tom; Serwadda, David; Wawer, Maria; Gray, Ronald
    Male circumcision (MC) has been shown to reduce the risk of HIV acquisition by 50 – 60% [ 1 – 3 ] and the WHO now recommends it as one of the proven methods for HIV prevention [ 4 ] . Several programmes in sub-Saharan Africa have initiated MC implementation. For MC to be effective at a community level there is need to achieve high MC coverage, and modelling suggests that the higher the prevalence of MC the greater the impact on HIV incidence [ 5 ] . One reason consistently cited by men for not accepting MC is fear of pain during surgery [ 6 – 10 ] . Our experience in Rakai is that when men are offered MC, only a few men initially come for surgery, and the majority, fearing pain, wait to hear the experiences of men who have had surgery.

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