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Tag: men's health

  • Democratic Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania to seek 4th term

    Democratic Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania to seek 4th term

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    HARRISBURG, Pa. — Democratic Sen. Bob Casey will seek a fourth term in office, bringing the power of incumbency and unmatched name recognition in Pennsylvania politics to his party’s defense of a seat in a critical presidential battleground state.

    The announcement by Casey, the longest-serving Democratic U.S. senator in Pennsylvania history, gives Democrats a boost ahead of a difficult 2024 Senate map. They must defend incumbents not only in red states — Montana, Ohio and West Virginia — but also in multiple swing states.

    Casey, who will turn 63 in a few days, is a key ally of labor unions and President Joe Biden. In Congress, Casey, a moderate Democrat, has backed all of Biden’s top priorities and forged a close relationship with the president, at least in part because the men also have a bond that goes beyond politics: They hail from the same hometown of Scranton.

    In running for reelection, Casey’s message sounds similar to how Biden’s campaign for a second term may sound. Casey points to landmark bills produced by a Democratic-controlled Congress that would expand spending on infrastructure such as airports and broadband internet, to reinvigorate a domestic semiconductor industry, to subsidize hydrogen fuel plants and to lower drug costs for Medicare recipients.

    Casey has cast himself as standing up to what he calls “corporate special interests,” and said there is more to do to lower the cost of living for working families, such as child care or prescription drugs.

    “That means being willing to fight and not back down from any fight for those communities and those families,” Casey said in an interview last week.

    The Senate Republicans’ campaign arm, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, is already attacking Casey for voting for laws under Biden that they say have worsened inflation, and threatened Social Security and Medicare – two programs that Casey has long championed.

    Casey said Republicans “dreamed that up” and countered that the GOP has long been hostile to Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security by proposing budgets and policy ideas that would “devastate” the programs.

    Republicans do not have a deep bench to challenge Casey, but they do have one potential top-tier candidate: former hedge fund CEO David McCormick, who narrowly lost the GOP nomination for Senate in 2022 to Dr. Mehmet Oz.

    McCormick, who has strong support from party brass, has a solid-gold resume as a decorated Gulf War veteran who graduated from West Point, got a doctoral degree from Princeton, served in the highest levels of then-President George W. Bush’s administration and ran one of the world’s largest hedge funds.

    He also has deep pockets and connections across spheres of politics, business and government from which to draw endorsements and campaign contributions — none of which was enough to prevail against Oz, the Donald Trump-backed candidate who went on to lose the general election to Democrat John Fetterman.

    If he runs, McCormick may have a contested primary: State Sen. Doug Mastriano has said he may run and suggested that he would win a primary “hands down.” That is prompting handwringing from party leaders after Mastriano, endorsed by Trump, ran a hard-right campaign in the governor’s race last year, and was beaten soundly.

    Many Republicans acknowledge that it will be difficult to beat Casey. Some privately say he can’t be beaten.

    Casey is perhaps Pennsylvania’s best-known politician, even if he has a relatively low profile in Washington without a prime committee chairmanship in his portfolio. In Pennsylvania, he has run statewide seven times already — winning six of those races — and is the son of the state’s former two-term governor.

    He has never ran a close race for Senate — he won his 2018 race by 13 percentage points — and kept an active schedule on the campaign trail last year by helping Fetterman.

    Still, Casey said he always expects a tough race, given Pennsylvania’s status as a battleground state.

    “I’ve been spending years on the road and going to all of our 67 counties and delivering for the people of our state and communities in our state,” Casey said. “And that’s the kind of approach I’ll take to the campaign: We’re going to go everywhere and try to earn every vote.”

    The one-time “ pro-life Democrat ” backed a bill last year to write abortion rights into federal law when it became apparent that the Supreme Court would overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade ruling.

    Casey is not just any Democrat in the abortion debate. His father, former Gov. Bob Casey, Sr., opposed abortion rights and signed legislation in the state that spawned another landmark abortion case, Planned Parenthood v. Casey. In 1992, the Supreme Court ultimately upheld Roe in the case but allowed states to add some limitations on the procedure.

    Casey has said he does not support a complete ban on abortion, and believes that lawmakers should work to reduce the number of abortions and unintended pregnancies in their states, and to do more to support women and families.

    In January, as he geared up for the campaign, Casey announced that he would undergo surgery for prostate cancer. More than seven weeks after surgery, Casey said he feels fully recovered. His office has said the procedure went well and that he would require no further treatment. He has since returned to work.

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    Follow Marc Levy on Twitter: http://twitter.com/timelywriter

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  • Italy’s Berlusconi has leukemia, lung infection, doctors say

    Italy’s Berlusconi has leukemia, lung infection, doctors say

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    ROME — Former Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi is being treated for a lung infection that is a result of chronic leukemia, his doctors said Thursday, revealing the latest of string of health setbacks for the 86-year-old media mogul.

    Berlusconi’s personal physician, Alberto Zangrillo, signed off on a medical bulletin that said Berlusconi has had leukemia “for some time” but that the cancer of the blood cells was in a “persistent chronic phase.”

    The statement was the first official word from doctors since Berlusconi was admitted to Milan’s San Raffaele Hospital on Wednesday. Dr. Fabio Ciceri, who is head of hematology, bone marrow transplation and blood cancer at the hospital, co-signed it.

    “The current treatment strategy envisions treatment of the pulmonary infection” as well as specialized treatment “aimed at limiting the negative effects” of the chronic leukemia, the bulletin stated.

    Berlusconi is a media mogul who served three terms as Italy’s premier and now serves in the Senate. He was admitted to an intensive care unit at San Raffaele Hospital on Wednesday for treatment of what aides indicated was a respiratory problem stemming from a previous infection.

    Earlier Thursday, a close political ally, Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani, quoting Zangrillo, reported that Berlusconi was alert and in stable condition at the hospital. Tajani is the coordinator of Forza Italia, the political party that Berlusconi created some 30 years ago.

    Zangrillo, Berlusconi’s longtime physician, is a chief anesthesiologist at San Raffaele Hospital. The former three-time premier and now senator had left the same hospital a week ago after several days of tests.

    The medical bulletin didn’t specify which treatment Berlusconi was receiving.

    Berlusconi “is currently in intensive care for the treatment of a pulmonary infection,” the bulletin said. It noted that his leukemia was in a ”persistent chronic phase” and that tests have found an “absence of evolving characteristics of acute leukemia,” which develops more quickly.

    Without citing any sources, Italian news agency ANSA reported that Berlusconi had received chemotherapy.

    Berlusconi’s party whip in the lower chamber of the Italian Parliament, Paolo Barelli, told reporters that Berlusconi “is responding to treatment,” but Barelli declined to specify what kind.

    A statement from Forza Italia said Berlusconi on Thursday morning had telephoned several party officials about political matters.

    Meanwhile family members continued to visit Berlusconi. Spotted arriving at the hospital were his brother, Paolo, his eldest daughter, Marina, and his younger son, Luigi.

    The last years have seen Berlusconi suffer numerous health problems, including heart ailments and COVID-19 in 2020, which saw him hospitalized then in critical condition with pneumonia.

    He has had a pacemaker for years, underwent heart surgery to replace an aortic valve in 2016 and overcame prostate cancer decades ago.

    On March 31, Berlusconi tweeted when he left the hospital after a battery of tests that he was “ready and determined to commit myself as I’ve always done to the country I love.”

    His brother made no comment upon arriving at the hospital Thursday morning. But when he left the hospital the night before, Paolo Berlusconi said of his brother: “He’s a rock. Thus, he’ll make it this time, too.”

    With no political heir apparent despite Berlusconi’s multiple health setbacks, Forza Italia has seen its popularity at the polls slump to a fraction of what it enjoyed years ago, when voters helped to repeatedly propel him into the premiership despite his legal woes.

    Among the messages for a quick recovery was one from Premier Giorgia Meloni, who tweeted “Forza Silvio,” riffing off the soccer chant that Berlusconi turned into the name of his political party, which is currently one of two junior coalition partners in Meloni’s nearly six-month-old right-wing government.

    On Wednesday, during a Senate confidence roll-call vote when Berlusconi’s name was called and an official said “absent,” a round of applause erupted from across the political spectrum in Parliament’s upper chamber.

    The Senate seat Berlusconi won in September is fruit of his latest political comeback. A decade ago, he was banned from holding public office over a tax fraud conviction stemming from dealings in his media empire.

    Last year, he triggered an uproar with comments about his old friend, Russian President Vladimir Putin, boasting that the two had exchanged birthday greetings. Berlusconi also has blamed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for the war.

    ___

    Luca Bruno in Milan contributed to this report.

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  • Police: Shooting outside hookah lounge leaves 1 dead, 4 hurt

    Police: Shooting outside hookah lounge leaves 1 dead, 4 hurt

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    Police in North Carolina say one person was killed and four others were wounded in a shooting in the parking lot of a North Carolina hookah lounge

    FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. — One person was killed and four others were wounded in a shooting in the parking lot of a North Carolina hookah lounge, police said.

    The shooting happened shortly before 11 p.m. Sunday at the V Luxx Hookah Lounge, the Fayetteville Police Department said in a statement posted on Facebook.

    A male victim died at the scene and four adults were transported to a hospital, including one listed in critical condition and three with minor injuries, police said.

    An initial investigation found an “altercation” inside the lounge led to a shooting in the parking lot, police said.

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  • Higher cancer rates found in military pilots, ground crews

    Higher cancer rates found in military pilots, ground crews

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    WASHINGTON — A Pentagon study has found high rates of cancer among military pilots and for the first time has shown that ground crews who fuel, maintain and launch those aircraft are also getting sick.

    The data had long been sought by retired military aviators who have raised alarms for years about the number of air and ground crew members they knew who had cancer. They were told that earlier military studies had found they were not at greater risk than the general U.S. population.

    In its yearlong study of almost 900,000 service members who flew on or worked on military aircraft between 1992 and 2017, the Pentagon found that air crew members had an 87% higher rate of melanoma and a 39% higher rate of thyroid cancer, while men had a 16% higher rate of prostate cancer and women a 16% higher rate of breast cancer. Overall, the air crews had a 24% higher rate of cancer of all types.

    The study showed ground crews had a 19% higher rate of brain and nervous system cancers, a 15% higher rate of thyroid cancer and a 9% higher rate of kidney or renal cancers, while women had a 7% higher rate of breast cancer. The overall rate for cancers of all types was 3% higher.

    There was some good news reported as well. Both ground and air crews had far lower rates of lung cancer, and air crews also had lower rates of bladder and colon cancers.

    The data compared the service members with the general U.S. population after adjusting for age, sex and race.

    The Pentagon said the new study was one of the largest and most comprehensive to date. An earlier study had looked at just Air Force pilots and had found some higher rates of cancer, while this one looked across all services and at both air and ground crews. Even with the wider approach, the Pentagon cautioned that the actual number of cancer cases was likely to be even higher because of gaps in the data, which it said it would work to remedy.

    The study “proves that it’s well past time for leaders and policy makers to move from skepticism to belief and active assistance,” said retired Air Force Col. Vince Alcazar, a member of the Red River Valley Fighter Pilots Association, which had lobbied the Pentagon and Congress for help. Alcazar serves on the association’s medical issues committee.

    The study was required by Congress in the 2021 defense bill. Now, because higher rates were found, the Pentagon must conduct an even bigger review to try to understand why the crews are getting sick.

    Isolating potential causes is difficult, and the Pentagon was careful to note that this study “does not imply that military service in air crew or ground crew occupations causes cancer, because there are multiple potential confounding factors that could not be controlled for in this analysis,” such as family histories, smoking or alcohol use.

    But aviation crews have long asked for the Pentagon to look closely at some of the environmental factors they are exposed to, such as jet fuels and solvents used to clean and maintain jet parts, sensors and their power sources in aircraft nose cones, and the massive radar systems on the decks of the ships they land on.

    When Navy Capt. Jim Seaman would come home from a deployment aboard an aircraft carrier, his gear would reek of jet fuel, his widow Betty Seaman said. The A-6 Intruder pilot died in 2018 at age 61 of lung cancer. Betty Seaman still has his gear stored and it still smells of fuel, “which I love,” she said.

    She and others wonder if there’s a link. She said crews would talk about how even the ship’s water systems would smell of fuel.

    She said she and others have mixed feelings about finally seeing in data what they have suspected for years about the aviation cancers. But “it has the potential to do a lot of good as far as early communication, early detection,” she said.

    The study found that when crew members were diagnosed with cancer, they were more likely to survive than members of the general population, which the study suggested was because they were diagnosed earlier due to regular required medical checkups and were more likely to be in better health because of their military fitness requirements.

    The Pentagon acknowledged that the study had gaps that likely led to an undercount of cancer cases.

    The military heath system database used in the study did not have reliable cancer data until 1990, so it may not have included pilots who flew early-generation jets in the prior decades.

    The study also did not include cancer data from the Department of Veterans Affairs or state cancer registries, which means it did not capture cases from former crew members who got sick after leaving the military medical system.

    “It is important to note that study results may have differed had additional older former service members been included,” it said.

    To remedy that, the Pentagon is now going to pull data from those registries to add to the total count, the study said.

    The second phase of the study will try to isolate causes. The 2021 bill requires the Defense Department not only to identify “the carcinogenic toxicants or hazardous materials associated with military flight operations,” but also determine the type of aircraft and locations where diagnosed crews served.

    After her husband got sick, Betty Seaman asked him if he would have chosen differently, knowing his service might be linked to his cancer.

    “I flat-out asked Jim. And he, without hesitation, said, ‘I would have still done it.’”

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  • Pfizer buys Seagen for $43B, boosts access to cancer drugs

    Pfizer buys Seagen for $43B, boosts access to cancer drugs

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    Pfizer will spend $43 billion to buy Seagen and deepen its reach into treating cancer.

    The pharmaceutical giant said Monday that it will pay $229 in cash for each Seagen share.

    Bothell, Washington-based Seagen Inc. is a biotech drug developer that specializes in antibody-drug conjugate, or ADC, technology. Its key products use lab-made proteins called monoclonal antibodies that seek out cancer cells to help deliver a cancer-killing drug while sparing surrounding healthy tissue.

    The deal announced Monday will combine Seagen’s technology with Pfizer’s scale and strength, Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a statement.

    Pfizer’s oncology division brought in $12 billion in revenue last year and already includes treatments for prostate cancer and the breast cancer treatment Ibrance.

    Seagen, which changed its name from Seattle Genetics in 2020, saw total revenue grow about 25% last year to nearly $2 billion. The company shaved its loss to $610 million last year. That’s down from $674 million in 2021.

    Seagen’s top seller, Adcetris, treats lymph system cancers. It brought in $839 million in sales last year, a 19% increase over the previous year.

    Aside from Adcetris, Seagen also has a deal with Pfizer’s Array BioPharma to develop, make and sell the breast and colorectal cancer treatment Tukysa. It brought in $353 million in sales last year.

    Seagen also saw sales grow 33% to $451 million last year for Padcev, which treats some cancers of the urinary tract, including the bladder. The drugmaker is developing and selling that treatment with Astellas Pharma Inc.

    Seagen anticipates generating approximately $2.2 billion of revenue this year. That would represent 12% growth.

    Pfizer recorded about $100 billion in total revenue last year and has been flush with cash thanks to sales of its COVID-19 vaccine and treatment, Comirnaty and Paxlovid.

    Bourla said earlier this year that the company planned to use its “extraordinary firepower” to buy products that will deliver $25 billion in incremental revenue by 2030.

    New York-based Pfizer Inc. has already spent $11.6 billion on migraine treatment developer Biohaven Pharmaceutical.

    It also spent $5.4 billion on sickle cell disease treatment maker Global Blood Therapeutics and bought Arena Pharmaceuticals for another $6.7 billion.

    Bourla said in January that Pfizer plans to launch 19 new products or new indications for existing products over the next year and a half.

    The drugmaker needs more revenue sources in part because it faces the expiration of patents protecting drugs like Ibrance from cheaper competition in the coming years.

    Pfizer said Monday it will pay for the deal mostly through $31 billion in new, long-term debt.

    Both companies’ boards have unanimously approved the deal. But regulators still need to look at it, and Seagen shareholders will have to approve it.

    The companies expect to complete the transaction in late 2023 or early 2024.

    Shares of Pfizer slipped about 2% to $38.55 before markets opened Monday while Seagen’s stock jumped nearly 20% to $206.40.

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  • Sheriff: Gunman fatally shot, 2 wounded near barn fire

    Sheriff: Gunman fatally shot, 2 wounded near barn fire

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    BROOKSVILLE, Fla. — Florida sheriff’s deputies opened fire, fatally shooting an armed man who had wounded two people and set fire to a barn before barricading himself inside a house, authorities said Saturday.

    The dead gunman was identified as 64-year-old Steve John Roosa, the Hernando County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release. The deputies involved in the shooting were members of the agency’s SWAT team but were not identified by name.

    According to the sheriff’s office, deputies and firefighters were originally called to a residence Friday afternoon near Brooksville by neighbors who saw smoke from a fire in a barn at the rear of the property. Soon, more 911 calls came in reporting that someone was firing shots at the property and that two people had been struck.

    One victim, a female, was able to get away from the home on her own and into a waiting ambulance. The second victim, a male, was lying on the property but deputies were unable to immediately get to him because Roosa was continuing to fire shots. Eventually the man was rescued and taken to a hospital.

    Meanwhile, the sheriff’s office said Roosa barricaded himself in the house and refused all communication. The SWAT team ultimately “breached the residence and deployed chemical agents,” the news release said. Roosa came out the front door — still armed — and deputies opened fire, fatally shooting him.

    The female victim was treated and released at a local hospital. The male victim was hospitalized Saturday in critical condition, the sheriff’s office said. Their identities were not made public, nor their relationship if any to Roosa. No deputies were injured.

    The Florida Department of Law Enforcement will investigate the circumstances of the shooting.

    Brooksville is about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Tampa.

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  • Powerhouse Long Islanders turn to the barbershop to drive awareness about life-saving services and support for men | Long Island Business News

    Powerhouse Long Islanders turn to the barbershop to drive awareness about life-saving services and support for men | Long Island Business News

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    You – or a man in your life – are relaxing in the barber chair. The barber is wearing a pin, or you spot a sign on the mirror, something about cancer awareness, and services available for those receiving treatment, free of charge.

    This particular barber is encouraging men to sign up for a potentially life-saving prostate-cancer exam. He’s also certified in providing services to those battling cancer so that they can recharge amid their quest to restore their health.

    Powerhouse Long Islanders are on a grassroots mission to empower their neighbors to take charge of their health. It’s a message they share with top Long Island medical organizations, where access to care and education about resources are essential to good health outcomes, especially in underserved communities, where the resources may be less available.

    Steering that effort are leaders at both Mondays at Racine and at Women & Men against Prostate Cancer. They have joined forces to effect change and are holding a ribbon-cutting for a new awareness campaign on Monday, Feb. 27, at 5 p.m. at Sir Shave Barber Parlor in Wyandanch.

    Leading the effort from Mondays is Karla Waldron, a driving force in directing the organization’s focus on providing free-of-charge health, beauty and wellness services with over 18 providers to those 13 and over who are battling cancer. In this effort, volunteers are “treating the whole person” and “in tandem with hospitals and big oncology centers in the region,” Waldron said.

    Maia Salon and Wellness in Smithtown is one of the Mondays at Raceine locations that offers free services to those fighting cancer. Courtesy of Mondays at Racine

    Among those leading the charge is Lorraine Pace, Women & Men’s founder and president.  A breast cancer survivor, Pace is credited with creating the nation’s first breast cancer map, having spotted a possible link between her diagnosis and contaminants in the drinking water on her dead-end street in West Islip. Pace’s efforts wound up ultimately replicated across communities in New York and then nationally and internationally. Now she and her team aim to build the same kind of awareness surrounding prostate cancer. Her husband John Pace, a cancer activist and an attorney, died of prostate cancer in 2015.

    “If I knew as much about prostate cancer as he knew about breast cancer, he’d be alive today,” she said.

    “The majority of the people” that Mondays serves are women, Waldron said. “We’re really trying to inspire and empower the men to walk through our doors.” Women & Men, she said, “works directly with prostate cancer, a men’s cancer. We want to illuminate awareness. They do an excellent job.”

    The barber shop is a natural spot to build that awareness.

    Both organizations are eager to begin their efforts in Wyandanch, where nearly 60% of the population is Black, according to the most recent estimates published by the U.S. Census Bureau.  African American men are more likely to get prostate cancer than other men, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    “Barber shops are the heart of the community,” said Errol Toulon, Jr., the first African American to become Suffolk County sheriff and a two-time cancer survivor. “It’s where a lot of people congregate. It’s where you hear what’s going on in the community. People talk about sports. There’s political talk. Sometimes fathers, sons and grandfathers all go to the same barbershop through the generations.”

    “Prostate cancer is the most common cancer among men, but when diagnosed early, is highly treatable. African American men and men with a family history of prostate cancer have a significantly higher chance of having prostate cancer,” said Dr. Christopher Atalla, Good Samaritan University Hospital’s director of Men’s Health and Women & Men medical director.

    Portrait of DR. CHRISTOPHER ATALLA

    DR. CHRISTOPHER ATALLA: ‘Minorities and those living in underserved areas are especially susceptible due to a lack of access to healthcare and various screening modalities.’ Courtesy of Women & Men against Prostate Cancer

    “Minorities and those living in underserved areas are especially susceptible due to a lack of access to healthcare and various screening modalities,” he added. “This is why our community work with Women & Men against Prostate Cancer is crucial to the health and safety of Long Islanders.  Annual exams and PSA checks are crucial to identifying and treating this otherwise silent disease.”

    Addressing racial and ethnic disparities in cancer care is a key priority for Northwell Health. The healthcare system has made “inroads in lowering cancer cases and mortality rates have dropped,” Dr. Richard Barakat, physician-in-chief and director of the Northwell Health Cancer Institute, said in a Queens Chronicle op-ed in December. Still, there are disparities “because of inadequate access to quality care, including routine cancer screenings like colonoscopies and mammograms.” Education and translation services would go a long way to reaching underserved communities, leading to better outcomes, he said.

    Toulon said he encourages men to seek out Mondays services because when fighting cancer, “you feel like your body’s betraying you.” The services, he said, “are something that feel normal, and you feel human again.”

    Mondays – the organization got its name because typically salons are not open on Mondays, a good day for volunteers to offer services – provides medically approved services, Waldron said. They include facials and skincare, massage, makeup application, gentle head-shaving, scalp treatment, acupuncture, non-toxic hair dye, yoga, reiki, manicures and pedicures, meditation and more.

    With that “healing support that surrounds them, they do feel empowered, taking a little back of the control of what’s happened to their body,” Waldron said. “It teaches them that when they are proactive in getting better, they sleep better at night … They lessen the anxiety and impact of the stress of going through cancer.”

    Keith Banks, the owner of Sir Shave, is enthusiastic about the organizations, welcoming both into his barbershop.

    “When it comes to awareness of cancer in the minority community, it’s a huge concern,” Banks said. In some instances, “there’s a lack of resources and a lack of education. People don’t want to get tested – it’s the fear of the unknown ripple effect.”

    Yet, the shop has clients who “have gone through chemotherapy and also unfortunately some who have passed away,” Banks said. “It touches everyone.”

    Now, his team is receiving ongoing training from Mondays on how to provide services so that clients “feel loved and connected and respected,” he said.

    At the same time, they are prepared to have conversations that encourage clients so that they have the resources to get tested, know their genetic histories or to become “more proactive,” he said.

    Earlier awareness might have saved Lorraine Pace’s husband, sparing him “horrible pain,” she said. “He had symptoms going to the bathroom in the middle of the night. The doctor said it was because of his water pills …. He should have gone to a urologist.”

    At barbershops across the region, ideally, there would be literature about both organizations, serving as conversation-starters.

    Lisa Pace, the board attorney for Women & Men said that it would “train the barbers to start talking” to the men, who are “a captive audience” while they are getting groomed.

    That makes sense to Banks.

    In the barber chair, there’s “that close connection. Those conversations mean a lot,” Banks said. Those 30 minutes could be used spreading the message about a test that could save lives and about a path to an abundance of wellness services and support.

    The message, Lisa Pace said, has to reach men in every community. “All men are underserved because of their own doing,” she said, pointing out that men don’t talk enough about getting checked.

    That silence is not unlike the days before Lorraine Pace helped bring about breast cancer awareness.

    “Same as with the pink ties, sweaters and dresses and have-you-been-checked-for-breast-cancer, we need to have those same conversations about prostate cancer,” said Suffolk County Legis. Steven Flotteron.

    And while men may be reluctant to talk about it, the women in their life are not, which is why, Lisa Pace said, “We’re called Women & Men against Prostate Cancer.”

    In October, the Suffolk County H. Lee Dennison Building was illuminated blue for Prostate Cancer Awareness month. Women & Men have been sharing information about free screenings around Long Island. And now the group is working on getting a prostate-awareness postage stamp produced, something Lorraine Pace did for breast cancer.

    All of this prompts necessary dialog about the path to treatment and wellness.

    “I understand people are afraid of a negative diagnosis,” Toulon said.  “But the quicker the diagnosis, the quicker the treatment and hopefully the quicker the road to recovery.”

    Meanwhile, Waldron hopes more barbershops will get on board.

    “We’re hoping to find more partners across Long Island that will want to join us,” she said.

    [email protected]

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    Adina Genn

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  • ABC Reveals All ‘GMA’ Anchors Have Been Castrated

    ABC Reveals All ‘GMA’ Anchors Have Been Castrated

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    NEW YORK—Saying the hosts’ personal lives had become a distraction that threatened the program’s journalistic integrity, ABC News president Kimberly Godwin announced Friday that all Good Morning America anchors had been castrated. “At GMA, genitals aren’t what’s important—what’s important is reporting the news,” said Godwin, who confirmed that all on-air talent—including T.J. Holmes, Amy Robach, George Stephanopoulos, Robin Roberts, and Michael Strahan—had undergone either surgical castration to remove their testicles or chemical castration to reduce their libido, depending on their sex. “I want to be clear that this is not about punishing anyone. It’s about professionalism. To preserve our reputation as a news outlet, we must be 100% certain no GMA anchor ever again has sex outside their marriage.” At press time, Godwin had reportedly responded to the casual flirtation of two correspondents by separating them and moving their desks to opposite sides of the newsroom.

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  • A Game Changer Book for Men Facing Cancer

    A Game Changer Book for Men Facing Cancer

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    Founder of Man Up to Cancer Launches New Book to Address the Unique Challenges of Men with Cancer

    Press Release


    Dec 6, 2022

    Not many men open up about what it’s really like to face cancer – no filters, no pretense. But Trevor Maxwell, a husband and father of two young girls and founder of Man Up to Cancer, is changing that story. 

    In March 2018, Maxwell was diagnosed with Stage IV colon cancer and has since undergone five major surgeries and more than 50 rounds of chemotherapy and immunotherapy. 

    In Maxwell’s new book, “Open Heart, Warrior Spirit: A Man’s Guide to Living with Cancer,” he tells the story of one patient’s quest to create a ‘wolfpack’ for men with cancer. The book not only explains why men go into their man caves when facing a cancer diagnosis but provides a roadmap for surviving and thriving through treatment. 

    “For men with cancer, there’s an old road to travel, and you’re supposed to walk alone. Don’t show pain. Don’t burden others. Don’t talk about it,” Maxwell said. “The trouble is, isolation during cancer leads to mental health problems and worse medical outcomes. This book offers a new road for men facing cancer where we share the burden, accept help, and give help along the way. It’s a wolfpack mentality. We’re stronger and smarter as a pack than we are as lone wolves.” 

    Patrick Dempsey, known worldwide for his iconic television and film roles, met Maxwell in 2019 through the Dempsey Center, which provides counseling, nutrition, exercise, and other services to cancer patients and their families. Dempsey’s endorsement appears on the back cover of Maxwell’s book. 

    “Trevor writes with authenticity, generosity, and heart. For men facing cancer and the people who love them, this book is a game changer,” said Patrick Dempsey. 

    Maxwell also founded “Man Up to Cancer,” a purpose-driven company and support community, with a mission to inspire men to avoid isolation during the cancer journey. Through this community, the hearts of countless men across the country and around the world have been opened, helping them share their fears and burdens so they can find their warrior spirits and better fight their disease. Since its inception, Man Up to Cancer has grown into a thriving international community with a popular podcast and sought-after swag. The testimonials from those who have found Man Up to Cancer speak to the group’s effect on their lives. 

    “Open Heart, Warrior Spirit: A Man’s Guide to Living with Cancer” is currently available through Amazon and can be accessed here

    Maxwell resides in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, with his wife and two daughters. 

    About Man Up to Cancer

    Man Up to Cancer inspires men to connect and avoid isolation during their cancer journeys. Founded in 2020 by a Stage IV colon cancer survivor, the purpose-driven company and online community offers a podcast, annual retreat, and Facebook group with more than 2,000 men impacted by cancer. Man Up to Cancer also operates a Chemo Backpack program, sending backpacks filled with practical items to men going through chemotherapy. 

    For more information, visit www.manuptocancer.com and follow us on Facebook and Instagram

    +++

    Source: Man Up to Cancer

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  • Sperm counts may be declining globally, review finds, adding to debate over male fertility | CNN

    Sperm counts may be declining globally, review finds, adding to debate over male fertility | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Over the past 50 years, human sperm counts appear to have fallen by more than 50% around the globe, according to an updated review of medical literature.

    If the findings are confirmed and the decline continues, it could have important implications for human reproduction. Researchers say it would also be a harbinger of declining health in men in general, since semen quality can be an important marker of overall health.

    The review, and its conclusions, have sparked a debate among experts in male fertility. Some say the findings are real and urgent, but others say they are not convinced by the data because the methods of counting sperm have changed so much over time that it’s not possible to compare historical and modern numbers.

    Nearly all experts agree that the issue needs more study.

    “I think one of the fundamental functions of any species is reproduction. So I think if there is a signal that reproduction is in decline, I think that’s a very important finding,” said Dr. Michael Eisenberg, a urologist with Stanford Medicine who was not involved in the review.

    “There is a strong link between a man’s reproductive health and his overall health. So it could also speak to that too, that maybe we’re not as healthy as we once were,” he said.

    Others say that while the review was well-done, they are skeptical about its conclusions.

    “The way that semen analysis is done has changed over the decades. It has improved. It has become more standardized, but not perfectly,” said Dr. Alexander Pastuczak, a surgeon and assistant professor the University of Utah School of Medicine in Salt Lake City. He was not involved in the review.

    “Even if you were to take the same semen sample and run it and do a semen analysis on it in the 1960s and ’70s versus today, you’d get two different answers,” he said.

    Pastuczak says that in more contemporary studies of semen analysis, ones that rely on samples analyzed by a different method, “you don’t see these trends.” In fact, some studies in Northern European regions show sperm counts going up over time, not down, he said.

    The new analysis updates a review published in 2017 and for the first time includes new data from Central and South America, Asia and Africa. It was published in the journal Human Reproduction Update.

    An international team of researchers combed through nearly 3,000 studies that recorded men’s sperm counts and were published between 2014 and 2020, years that had not been included in their previous analysis.

    The researchers excluded studies that featured only men who were being evaluated for infertility, those that selected only men who had normal sperm counts and those whose study participants were selected based on genital abnormalities or diseases. They included only studies published in English, those with 10 or more men and those with participants whose sperm was collected in the typical way and counted using a device called a hemocytometer.

    In the end, just 38 studies met their criteria. They added these to studies included in their previous review and extracted their data, which was fed into models.

    Overall, the researchers determined that sperm counts fell by sightly more than 1% per year between 1973 and 2018. The study concluded that globally, the average sperm count had fallen 52% by 2018.

    When the study researchers restricted their analysis to certain years, they found that the decline in sperm counts seemed to be accelerating, from an average of 1.16% per year after 1973 to 2.64% per year after 2020.

    “It’s really remarkable that actually the decline is increasing,” said study author Dr. Hagai Levine, an epidemiologist and public health researcher at the Braun School of Public Health and Community Medicine.

    On a population level, the average sperm count dropped from 104 million to 49 million per milliliter from 1973 through 2019. Normal sperm counts are considered to be over 40 million per milliliter.

    The study authors say they didn’t have enough data from different regions to be able to tell whether some countries had lower average sperm counts than others or whether sperm counts were declining faster in certain areas. Data from 53 countries was included in the review.

    The authors also didn’t look at what might be causing the decline. “It should be studied,” Levine said.

    In other research, Levine says, he and others have teased out some factors that are associated with lower sperm counts.

    Damage to reproductive health may begin in the womb.

    “We know that stress of the mother, maternal smoking and especially exposure to manmade chemicals that are in plastic, such as phthalates, disrupt the development of the male reproductive system,” Levine said.

    Lifestyle may also play an important role. Obesity, a lack of physical activity and diets high in ultraprocessed food may all be culprits, he said.

    “The same factors that harm health in general usually are also harmful to semen quality,” he said.

    One expert said that, ultimately, trying to do this kind of study is fraught with problems that complicate the findings.

    “The paper is very scientifically or statistically robust and does a good job of summarizing the data that is available in our field. But it’s important to recognize that that data is still very limited in how it was collected and how it was reported,” said Dr. Scott Lundy, a urologist at the Cleveland Clinic who was not involved in the research.

    Standards and methods for counting sperm have changed greatly over time, Lundy says, making it difficult to compare modern counts to historical data.

    Still, he said, that historical data is all that’s available to the field.

    “While it’s not a cause for panic, because the counts are by and large still normal, on average, there is a risk that they could become abnormal in the future, and we have to recognize that and study that further,” Lundy said.

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  • Andy Taylor, former Duran Duran guitarist, has stage four prostate cancer | CNN

    Andy Taylor, former Duran Duran guitarist, has stage four prostate cancer | CNN

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    London
    CNN
     — 

    Andy Taylor, guitarist with British New Romantic group Duran Duran at the height of their fame, is battling stage four prostate cancer.

    The band made the announcement on Saturday as they were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame during a ceremony at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.

    Taylor, who did not join his former bandmates John Taylor, Simon Le Bon, Roger Taylor and Nick Rhodes at the Class of 2022 celebrations due to ongoing treatment, wrote a letter to mark the occasion.

    In the note, parts of which were read out by frontman Le Bon, Taylor disclosed that he had received his diagnosis four years ago and spoke of his delight at being inducted into the hall of fame.

    “There’s nothing that comes close to such recognition. You can dream about what happened to us but to experience it, on one’s own terms, as mates, was beyond incredible,” Taylor wrote in the message relayed by Le Bon.

    Touching on his health issues, the 61-year-old Taylor added: “Many families have experienced the slow burn of this disease and of course, we are no different; so I speak from the perspective of a family man but with profound humility to the band, the greatest fans a group could have and this exceptional accolade.”

    Taylor joined Duran Duran in April 1980 and left in 1986 to pursue a solo career. He then rejoined in 2001 for a string of successful concerts and their 2004 album “Astronaut” before quitting again in 2006.

    Taylor said he was “massively disappointed” to miss the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame show, which was set to be his first time performing with the group in 16 years, and that he had “bought a new guitar” for the occasion.

    “I’m so very proud of these four brothers, I’m amazed at their durability, and I’m overjoyed at accepting this award,” Taylor said. “I often doubted the day would come. I’m sure as hell glad I’m around to see the day.”

    In the letter later shared in full on the band’s website, Taylor said his condition was incurable, but that he was receiving “sophisticated life-extending treatment” that had allowed him to “just rock on” until recent times when he suffered a “setback.”

    “Although my current condition is not immediately life-threatening there is no cure,” he said.

    According to the American Cancer Society, about one in eight men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during his lifetime.

    Reacting to Taylor’s health update on Saturday, Le Bon said: “It is devastating news to know and find out that a colleague… Not a colleague, a mate, a friend, one of our family is not going to be around for very long. It’s absolutely devastating. We love Andy dearly and you know, I’m not going to stand here and cry. I don’t think that would be very appropriate but that’s what I feel like.”

    Duran Duran formed in 1978 and topped the US singles charts in the 1980s with their hits “The Reflex” and “A View to a Kill.”

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  • Louis Farrakhan Fast Facts | CNN

    Louis Farrakhan Fast Facts | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Here’s a look at the life of Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam.

    Birth date: May 11, 1933

    Birth place: The Bronx, New York

    Birth name: Louis Eugene Walcott

    Father: Percival Clark

    Mother: Sarah Mae (Manning) Clark

    Marriage: Khadijah Farrakhan, formerly Betsy (Ross) Walcott, (September 12, 1953-present)

    Children: Mustapha, Joshua Nasir, Abnar, Louis Junior, Donna, Hanan, Maria, Fatimah and Khallada

    Education: Attended Winston-Salem Teachers College, 1951-1953

    Farrakhan was named for Louis Walcott, the man his mother became involved with after his biological father, Percival Clark, deserted them.

    The Walcott family moved from the Bronx to the Roxbury neighborhood in Boston during the mid-1930s.

    He won a track scholarship to college in North Carolina.

    Farrakhan is an accomplished classical violinist who began playing at the age of 5. He is also a singer, songwriter, playwright and film producer. Farrakhan wrote two plays, “The Trial” and “Orgena.” (“A Negro” spelled backward).

    Farrakhan is known for having preached antisemitic, anti-White, anti-Catholic and anti-homosexual rhetoric.

    1955 – Joins the Nation of Islam (NOI) and adopts the name Louis X.

    December 4, 1964 – Condemns rival Malcolm X in the NOI newspaper, Muhammad Speaks, saying “the die is set and Malcolm shall not escape… such a man is worthy of death.”

    February 21, 1965 – Malcolm X is assassinated. Louis X replaces him as the national spokesman of the NOI.

    Late 1960s – Takes the name Louis Abdul Farrakhan.

    Late 1970s – Farrakhan has a falling out with NOI leader, Wallace Deen Muhammad, who wants to move the NOI away from racial separatist teachings to a more conventional and racially inclusive Islam. The dispute leads to the formation of two rival groups. Farrakhan becomes head of the NOI, while Muhammad becomes the head of the World Community of al-Islam.

    December 1983 – Accompanies Jesse Jackson and other clergy to Syria to negotiate the release of US Navy pilot Lt. Robert O. Goodman.

    1984 – Months after Jesse Jackson came under heavy fire for his off-the-record comments that were later published in the Washington Post, referring to Jews by the insulting nickname “Hymie” and New York as “Hymietown,” Farrakhan, during his weekly radio broadcast, comes to Jackson’s defense claiming Judaism is a “gutter religion” and supporters of Israel are criminals in the sight of God.

    May 1, 1985 – Announces acceptance of a $5 million interest-free loan from Libyan president Moammar Gadhafi.

    June 25, 1986 – Files a lawsuit against US President Ronald Reagan, Secretary of State George Schultz, Secretary of Treasury James Baker and Attorney General Edwin Meese, claiming the government’s economic sanctions and travel ban on Libya violate Farrakhan’s freedom to worship and freedom of speech.

    June 3, 1987 – Farrakhan’s lawsuit against the government is terminated after a district court judge upholds economic sanctions against Libya and prevents the repayment of the $5 million loan.

    1991 – Receives first prostate cancer diagnosis.

    October 16, 1995 – Organizes the Million Man March, also known as the Day of Atonement, on the Mall in Washington, DC. The event features 12 hours of speeches on the commitment of black men to take responsibility for improving themselves, their families and communities.

    April 1999 – Prostate cancer reoccurrence requires emergency surgery at Howard University.

    February 25, 2000 – Farrakhan makes peace with former NOI leader, Muhammad, who formed his own Islamic group in the wake of a dispute with Farrakhan on the direction of NOI. The men announce the unification of their groups during an event called the Savior’s Day Rally.

    May 10, 2000 – Appears on “60 Minutes” with Malcolm X’s daughter, Qubilah Bahiyah Shabazz, and says he regrets that his writing may have influenced others to assassinate Malcolm X.

    October 15, 2005 – Organizes and speaks at the Million More Movement at the Mall in Washington, DC, commemorating the 10th anniversary of the Million Man March.

    September 22, 2006 – Releases a letter stating he is giving up many day-to-day duties as leader of the NOI due to illness, but will remain its leader.

    January 6, 2007 – Farrakhan undergoes a successful surgery to remove his prostate and cancerous colon tissue.

    October 10, 2015 – Farrakhan speaks at the “Justice or Else” rally in Washington, DC, marking the 20th anniversary of the Million Man March.

    February 11, 2016 – Farrakhan speaks at a rally at Tehran University in Iran, marking the 37th anniversary of Iran’s Islamic revolution.

    May 2, 2019 – Facebook designates Farrakhan “dangerous,” and bans him from its social media platforms.

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  • SinuSonic Announces Presentation of Double-Blind, Sham-Controlled Trial Data Showing Regular Use of the Device Improved Nasal Congestion

    SinuSonic Announces Presentation of Double-Blind, Sham-Controlled Trial Data Showing Regular Use of the Device Improved Nasal Congestion

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    New technology provides non-prescription, non-addictive, mess-free alternative to relieve congestion and runny nose

    Press Release


    May 26, 2022

    SinuSonic, a brand of Healthy Humming, LLC, is pleased to announce the presentation of the results from their study on “Double-blind, sham-controlled trial of a novel device for the treatment of viral upper respiratory tract infection.” This study was discussed during an oral podium presentation at the American Rhinological Society Spring meeting in Dallas, Texas, on April 28-29, 2022. This study showed, with the highest level of evidence, a randomized sham-controlled study that regular use of the active SinuSonic device improved nasal congestion.

    The prospective study was conducted at the Medical University of South Carolina in 2020-2021. Administration of acoustic vibration and oscillating expiratory positive pressure with SinuSonic has been shown in a prior study to improve nasal congestion and air flow. These interventions are hypothesized to release nasal nitric oxide, a molecule with known antiviral properties. The current study investigated the use of this device to prevent viral upper respiratory infections (URI) and reduce the severity and duration of rhinologic symptoms. 

    Asymptomatic community-dwelling adults were randomized to receive an active or a sham device (3:1). Subjects used the assigned device twice daily beginning at the start of the fall URI season. A validated metric of viral URI symptoms, Total Symptoms Score (TSS), was assessed each day for 8 weeks.

    Topline outcomes:

    • Those using the active device had 70% more days with no nasal congestion (57.2% vs 33.5%, p= 0.033)
    • A statistically significant difference in nasal congestion score was seen between the active and sham groups (0.503 vs. 0.843, = 0.036)
    • No subject in either the active or sham group developed symptoms meeting the study definition of a viral URI, likely due to viral precautions during the pandemic.
    • No major adverse events were detected, with 97.5% of subjects reporting zero pain or discomfort at the study conclusion.

    ABOUT NASAL CONGESTION

    Chronic nasal congestion impacts roughly 20% of the population and is associated with reduced quality of life, difficulty sleeping, reduced daytime performance, and increased healthcare utilization. It has been estimated that the financial impact of chronic nasal congestion is more than $5 – 10 billion annually. A survey conducted by Allergies in Americas found that despite the availability of pharmacologic options, many patients are not satisfied with available options. 

    Learn more about the science of SinuSonic and how SinuSonic works.

    ABOUT SINUSONIC

    Founded in Columbia, South Carolina, and born through the research and partnerships of Richard K. Bogan, M.D., and David J. Lewis, SinuSonic is the first-ever multi-patented (5) nasal congestion relief device to use acoustic vibrations to help provide nasal congestion relief. SinuSonic is designed in the U.S. with parts molded in the U.S. and assembled in an FDA-registered facility in Columbia, South Carolina. Since launching in July 2019, SinuSonic is being used in all 50 states. For more information and to view instructional videos, visit www.sinusonic.com.

    SinuSonic is available to the public at www.sinusonic.com.

    Media Contact:
    David Lewis
    Info@SinuSonic.com 
    (803) 888-6170

    Source: Healthy Humming, LLC

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