Quoted By:
1897 S. G. A. Brown, Medical World, vol. 15 (1897): pp. 124-125.: tuberculosis.
1900 Dr. Johnathan Hutchinson: the pleasure of sex; sexual immorality.
(well at least one of them were finally half right)
1901 H. G. H. Naylor, A Plea for Early Circumcision, Pediatrics, vol. 12 (1901): p. 231.: Frequent micturition [urination], loss of flesh, convulsions, phosphatic calculus, hernia, nervous exhaustion, dyspepsia, diarrhea, prolapse of rectum, balanitis, acute phimosis, masturbation.
1901 Dr. Ernest G. Mark: masturbation.
1902 W. G. Steele, Importance of Circumcision, Medical World, vol. 20 (1902): pp. 518-519.: convulsions, constant crying in infants, simulated hip joint diseases, backwardness in studies, enuresis, marasmus, muscular inco-ordination, paralysis, masturbation, neurasthenia, and even epilepsy.
1902 Dr. Roswell Park: epilepsy.
1912 Dr. Edwin Hartley Pratt: hydrocephalus. Pratt frequently prescribed circumcision and other adjustments of the genitals as a preventative for masturbation and other "unnatural" behaviors. He was a particularly strong advocate of circumcision as a cure for rape, opining that if only rapists "had received the proper orificial attention earlier in their lives their criminal career would undoubtedly have been prevented."[13] He advocated removal of the hood of the clitoris as a cure for female masturbation, and hysterectomies as a cure for female insanity.
1912 Lydston G. Frank: sexual irritability, evil sexual habits such as masturbation.
1914 Abraham L. Wolbarst: nervous phenomena, convulsions and epilepsy, masturbation, nocturnal pollutions. "It is therefore not at all improbable that in many infants who die in convulsions the real cause of death is a long or tight prepuce."
1914 Dr. Abraham L. Wolbarst: tuberculosis.
1915 L. W. Wuesthoff: passion, rape, separation and divorce, unhappy marriage.