Archive for Advocacy
Prostate Cancer Special on Larry King Live
Posted by: | CommentsHi,
Am just sitting down to watch Larry King (9 pm EST) after a grueling day of shopping — for strictly utilitarian things. Join me! The topic is prostate cancer. Guests include John McEnroe (father had PC), Christopher Rose, oncologist, Michael Milken, survivor and founder of the Prostate Cancer Foundation, Joe Torre, manager of Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team and PC survivor and Gen. Colin Powell (also had PC).
Sorry for the last-minute notice. But here in the East Coast the Larry King show is re-broadcast at midnight (EST).
Will try to post a review.
Support the UK Prostate Charity
Posted by: | CommentsThis is a follow-up to a post I wrote about a creative advertising contest in which the UK Prostate Cancer Charity took first place in the “Wild Card” category. http://prostatecancerblog.net/?p=1140. The winner of this contest will have their message posted on the sides of the buses that ply the streets of London. Now the last round of voting is taking place, *for the “Grand Prix”*, and I would really appreciate your taking a minute to go to this website and vote to support PC awareness. http://www.upeveryonesstreet.co.uk/?page_num=2 *Voting is only going on until July 23*, but you can vote everyday.
We must do everything we can to help our British brothers with whom we do have a “special relationship”. PSA testing is not done in Britain as often as it is in the US (about half of men over 50 in the U.S. are routinely screened), and as a result, many men in the U.K. are diagnosed with later-stage prostate cancer when fewer treatment options are available.
But PSA testing is not a panacea. We have to educate men as best we can to recognize early symptoms of prostate cancer. My husband went to the doctor only because he had trouble urinating. This is a typical symptom of BPH (Benign Prostate Enlargement), but it can also indicate prostate cancer. The doc did a PSA and a DRE — and the rest is history.
I just want to say something about the merits of the UKPCC ad, because this contest is about creativity after all. I did some work as a copywriter myself in the past, but here I am speaking simply as a member of the online PC community. I think the ad is clever and effective. It’s a real attention-getter that will save lives. (I can’t imagine posting a picture of a toilet on a bus in NY. We are such prudes!)
A final word: one of the other competitors is a lingerie company, and let’s make sure they don’t win because sex sells big-time.
Prostate Cancer Advocacy Groups Issue Statement on Screening
Posted by: | CommentsThe following statement about the recent controversy regarding PSA esting was issued this morning by the thirteen organizations, including Malecare (the sponsor of this blog), listed at the bottom of the statement:
A JOINT STATEMENT FROM AMERICA’S PROSTATE CANCER ADVOCACY, EDUCATION, AND SUPPORT ORGANIZATIONS
Since 1993, when the PLCO trial was started, we have awaited the results of this trial with eager anticipation, as have others. The initial report of the results of this study — and those of a comparable European trial — published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine have told us two things:
* The studies offer conflicting evidence about the possibility of a prostate cancer-specific survival benefit associated with the regular use of prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing and digital rectal examination (DRE).
* These studies provide no convincing evidence that mass screening of men over 50 or 55 years of age will lead to a prostate cancer-specific survival benefit within 10 years.
We have come together to make two clear statements about these trials:
* Above all we thank the patients, the investigators, and the national authorities that funded these two trials for their efforts. The
development and implementation of these trials over the past 16 years has been an enormous commitment by all concerned.
* We enthusiastically support the continued follow-up of patients in the prostate cancer arm of the PLCO study for at least a further 5 years, through 2014, as originally envisaged.
In addition, in the long-term interests of the health of every man in the USA, and with health reform recognized as a national priority, we wish to state the following:
* Every man, regardless of his age, has the right to know whether he is at risk from prostate cancer, a disease that still kills over 28,600
American men every year, and many more around the world. We encourage all men to be proactive, and to seek out information and support in regard to their health.
* We shall continue to encourage every man to discuss his individual risk for prostate cancer with his doctors, and to request the appropriate use of PSA and DRE tests until better options are
available. Further clinical action based on results of these tests is also a matter for serious discussion between each patient and his physicians.
* We call upon the federal government to emphasize the need for more research into early detection technologies and methods that will lead to better and more accurate diagnosis of prostate cancer.
* We call upon Congress to increase funding for the Prostate Cancer Research Program at the Department of Defense.
* We call upon the National Institutes of Health to increase funding for prostate cancer research through the National Cancer Institute.
* We call upon the medical research community to place greater emphasis on the development of new clinical tests that can differentiate between those men at greatest need for aggressive prostate cancer treatment and those with indolent forms of the
disease who can be well managed without invasive treatment.
The statement above was approved by the following US-based prostate cancer advocacy, education, and support organizations:
* American Urological Association Foundation
* Malecare Prostate Cancer Support
* Men’s Health Network
* National Alliance of State Prostate Cancer
Coalitions
* Prostate Cancer Foundation
* Prostate Cancer International
* Prostate Cancer Mission
* Prostate Conditions Education Council
* Prostate Health Education Network
* The Prostate Net
* US Too International
* Virginia Prostate Cancer Coalition
* Women Against Prostate Cancer
* ZERO — The Project to End Prostate Cancer
