A new study adds to growing evidence that exercise is an important part of preventing one of America’s deadliest cancers.
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Physical and Mental Health - Exercise, Fitness and Activity
Healthy body, healthy mind! Physical Exercise, Fitness, Running, Jogging, Gym and Activity. Twitter Hashtag: #GymEd Curated by Peter Mellow |
Scooped by Peter Mellow |
A new study adds to growing evidence that exercise is an important part of preventing one of America’s deadliest cancers.
Rescooped by Peter Mellow from Hospitals and Healthcare |
King Charles is having surgery to treat an enlarged prostate. Certain factors cause the condition in the male reproductive organ that’s often noticeable at age 50.
Scooped by Peter Mellow |
Most have low-risk cancers and rarely benefit from treatment, a new study finds. Actively monitoring the condition is often the best choice.
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Dana Jennings explains how, after cancer, running has helped him catch up with his old self.
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Most people don’t know what the prostate is for and some people don’t even know they have one, according to a new study highlighting the danger of prostate cancer.
The huge amount of ignorance around the gland could prove lethal to men, a charity has warned, and it may become the UK’s most common cancer.
The poor awareness of the gland – which can’t be seen outside of the body but sits underneath the bladder – might blind men to the risks and could lead to the disease not being tackled, warned Prostate Cancer UK.
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Pelvic floor exercises for men by Daivd Hughes, prostate cancer support nurse. www.prostates.com.au
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Men who have surgery for prostate cancer struggle to get proper advice about, or effective treatment for, its terrible side effects, writes Bettina Arndt.
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Lifestyle is a suspect in the most commonly diagnosed cancer in Australia men - but nailing specific culprits is difficult.
“With exercise the research gives mixed results – again this may be the effect of studying pussycats and tigers together. If we accept that obesity is part of the equation, then exercise may help ...
and we know that most middle aged Australian men don’t exercise enough."
Professor Graham Giles, Director of the Cancer Epidemiology Centre at the Cancer Council Victoria.