Nearly three-quarters of men in Scotland are too embarrassed to visit their GPs for prostate health, according to campaigners. The Men’s Health Forum charity is encouraging men to take greater responsibility for their wellbeing. The scheme focuses on benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), which affects about one-in-three men aged over 50. The campaign coincides with a Scottish Executive award of 4m to develop 10 Well Man clinics across Scotland. Former Partick Thistle, Liverpool and Scotland player Alan Hansen is unveiling the Time To Go campaign, which is also backed by the Westminster All-Party Group on Men’s Health.
BPH is a epilepsy handbook health issue treatment woman enlargement of the prostate gland, which compresses the urethra and obstructs urine flow. In severe cases kidney damage can occur.
The condition has also been linked to depression, anxiety, sexual dysfunction and difficulty in While treating BPH, GPs can also pick up early signs of prostate cancer, the second most dangerous form of cancer after lung cancer, killing 10,000 men a year in the UK.
Speaking at the launch, Mr Hansen said: “Sometimes men’s health hasn’t been given the priority it deserves, allied to the fact that when it comes to sensitive areas and sensitive issues men are hardly really active in discount man health magazine
He added: “This campaign is all about encouraging men to get to the doctors quickly when they get the symptoms. I’m 49 so I’m right on the verge of it.”
Mr Hansen urged men to refer to a new prostate health checklist intended to help identify symptoms and overcome any health man health baldness
Men’s Health Forum director Peter Baker added: “BPH is still very much a neglected disease The prostate checklist which gives men advice on the problem is available on the freephone number 0808 141 0808.
|
