It is usual that a baby’s foreskin will not retract (pull back) and the foreskin may not actually fully retract for years. Mothers don’t have personal experience of how to clean a boy’s foreskin and are often unsure of what to do.
The following guideline will help you:
There are no medical reasons for routine circumcision. Most boys are circumcised for religious reasons.
Sometimes, the foreskin is tight and balloons out when your son pees. Occasionally, this condition (phimosis) will require circumcision. If your son has a very tight foreskin at age 5 years, he may need a circumcision. Occasionally, boys will get an infection under the foreskin, called balanitis. If this keeps happening, there will likely be some scarring of the inside of the foreskin which cause a tightness that may require circumcision. Circumcision involves cutting the foreskin off.
There is evidence that circumcised boys get less urinary tract infections than uncircumcised boys, but the risk of urinary tract infection is so low in most boys, that being uncircumcised doesn’t matter. The risk of the operation for circumcision cancels out any benefit from preventing a urinary tract infection in most boys. Very few boys get a urinary tract infection, circumcised or not.
Careful attention to cleaning and care of the foreskin as outlined above should prevent your baby son having any problems.
Dr Maud is a pediatrician who provides up-to-date health information and practical medical advice for parents of babies and toddlers on her site Baby Medical Questions and Answers