May 19, 2024
Ocho Rios, St. Ann. Jamaica
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SPOTLIGHT ON PROSTATE CANCER

Urologist at the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI) and lecturer at the University of the West Indies (UWI), Dr. Belinda Morrison
Urologist at the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI) and lecturer at the University of the West Indies (UWI), Dr. Belinda Morrison

By: Latonya Linton (JIS)

Prostate Cancer awareness month is being observed in September under the theme: ‘Don’t Delay… Check Your Prostate’.The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that there will be 15 million new cases of prostate cancer worldwide by 2020. It is also estimated that one in six men in Jamaica will be diagnosed with the disease, and if caught early can be effectively treated.Urologist at the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI) and lecturer at the University of the West Indies (UWI), Dr. Belinda Morrison, tells JIS News that black persons over the world are at a higher risk of developing the disease.“Family history is also a major risk factor. If someone has one person in the family diagnosed with prostate cancer, say a brother or father, their risk increases by two fold and the more family members affected, the greater the risk,” she notes. She adds that men who are older are at a higher risk and as they get older are more likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer.         “Significant rates of prostate cancer are found in men fifty and above, but you also see it in men age 40 and above,” Dr. Morrison adds.She is encouraging persons to make healthy lifestyle choices by consuming a diet low in fat, and increasing the intake of fruits and vegetables, and exercising regularly. In addition, men 40 and over are being encouraged get their prostate screening done annually, in order to facilitate early detection and treatment if diagnosed. “Prostate cancer can present itself in two ways. It can present through screening, which is where you present to your doctor early and have the checks done and it is detected way before you have symptoms, or it may just be picked up when you start having symptoms,” Dr. Morrison says.She notes that when prostate cancer is detected by screening at an early stage, it can be cured. “When persons wait until they develop symptoms, it is usually at a more advanced stage and perhaps cannot be cured. This is where we are talking about treatment that can’t cure, but at least try to control the disease, but may not do it successfully for a very long time,” Dr. Morrison told JIS News.The Jamaica Cancer Society in association with the Jamaica Urological Society and National Health Fund will be undertaking prostate cancer screenings at the Montego Bay Culture Centre on September 23 and on September 27 at the Mandeville Parish Church.For more information persons can call the Cancer Society at (876) 927-4265 (Kingston), (876) 966-2914 (St. Elizabeth) and (876) 974-2790 (St. Ann/St. Mary) or visit their office at 16 Lady Musgrave Road in Kingston.