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Your prostate is roughly the size (and shape) of a walnut. It surrounds your urethra (the tube that carries urine from the bladder to the penis) and contains cells that support the development of sperm. Most often, prostate cancer is very slow to develop, and many men who have it will go their entire lives without being aware of it. According to the American Cancer Society, one in six men will get prostate cancer (and one in 36 will die from it)—the second most-common form of cancer in men, after skin cancer. Fortunately, mortality rates are decreasing, primarily thanks to earlier detection.

While the causes of prostate cancer are still up for debate, there are a number of risk factors that you should be aware of. The leading risk factors for increasing your chances of getting prostate cancer include age, race, family history and diet. In future posts we’ll examine each of these in more depth and examine prevention and testing.

Did you know that June is Men's Health Month? Men's Health month was started in 1994 by Congress to show how simple diagnostic and screening tests can save your life. Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in men. Deaths that are often avoidable if caught early enough. If you are 40, you should get an annual rectal exam and prostate specific antigen (PSA) blood test. In the early stages, prostate cancer often causes no symptoms for many years. As a matter of fact, these cancers frequently are first detected by an abnormality on a blood test (PSA) or as a hard nodule (lump) in the prostate gland. By the age of 50, one in four men have cancerous cells in the prostate gland and by the age of 80, your odds increase to one in two. Early detection increases your chance of a positive outcome, so get your prostate checked.
I just found out that some insurance companies deny men penile implants after prostate surgery that results in erectile dysfunction (impotence) while women who undergoe mastectomies qualify for breast implants? There is a bill that was introduced to congress that would change this: HR 1903. Prostate cancer affects much more than the individuals it aflicts, it affects their partners and families. I met a 59 year old man that offered his wife a divorce because he felt he could no longer meet her needs because he was no longer a man. This law would enable men to get their lives back. Read HR1903 and contact (click on the sponsors link to see them) one of the eleven members of congress that supported it. Let them know that this is important!