News

When former President Joe Biden announced his diagnosis of prostate cancer on May 19, everything changed for people like ...
A beloved couple in their 80s who died less than two weeks apart are among the tributes being made in The Gazette deaths and ...
(Prudhoe) Passed away peacefully in R.V.I on 9th June 2025 aged 73 years. Kenneth will be very sadly missed by all his family ...
Last month, former President Joe Biden announced that he had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer. The news sparked a larger conversation about what exactly the best practices are ...
Prostate cancer is known for being a "slow grower," meaning it often develops gradually without a dramatic onset. That’s why so many men ignore the early signs or confuse them with aging, diet ...
My InsiderI was diagnosed with prostate cancer on June 8, 2021, at 49. It was shortly before my 50th birthday. I'll admit I did not know a lot about prostate cancer then. I knew it was fairly ...
African American men should start at age forty since there's a racial predilection to get prostate cancer earlier in black men. And for all others, begin at age 45 with an annual PSA blood test.
How common is prostate cancer in Indiana? Prostate cancer was the most common cancer among Hoosier men from 2015 to 2019, according to the Indiana Department of Health's state Cancer Registry in 2022.
I explained that categorizing how aggressive the cancer is and how far it has spread can help determine the best course of treatment. Prostate cancer can be grouped into four stages.
Prostate cancer screening guidelines from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, last updated in 2018, says men ages 70 and older should not get routine prostate cancer screening.
Biden had a physical in early 2024, during the last year of his presidency. A six-page report released at the time by his physician, Dr. Kevin O'Connor, did not mention testing for prostate cancer ...
Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers in men. Although watchful waiting is appropriate for low-risk cases, many are diagnosed at an advanced stage because of racial health disparities.