Showing posts with label prostate cancer prevention. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prostate cancer prevention. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2009

So Easy a Caveman Can Do It!


We’ve all heard the Geico car insurance ad a million times, at least if we watch sports. So what does this saying have to do with prostate cancer? The answer is nothing and everything.

The research has just about reached the overwhelming stage that the Western diet, especially our American version - heavy on meat and dairy with their associated fat and toxic loads, is a major factor in prostate cancer development.

As a prostate cancer survivor, I’m pretty interested in ensuring that mine does not recur, so I started looking at the recurrence risk elements that are within my control. Basically, these factors are what I eat (my diet), what I do (exercise - or lack thereof), and what I think - laughter is great medicine.

On the food front, I decided to see how easily I could adopt a diet with no meat and dairy. But, I reasoned, it needs to be really EASY - there’s the caveman angle - because we guys (at least most of us) tend to graze on the first thing we see and things that are easy. Below is my first shot at doing green, the easy way.

I created what I think is a pretty passable salad using pre-washed vegetables - minimum preparation time. The ingredients: 1) pre-washed spinach; 2) pre-washed broccoli and romaine lettuce; 3) I peeled and diced some raw onions - it did require some peeling; and 4) I chopped in red peppers. Full disclosure; I did wash the red bell pepper. I drizzled extra virgin olive oil over the top along with some coarse sea salt, as I have a salt tooth. Et voila! A pretty good salad - very healthy - with almost no preparation. Make it as big as you like, there aren’t many calories but lots of great vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, etc. A caveman really could do this because they had that all important opposable thumb. And all in about 11.5 minutes. Got brocolli?

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Letter to the Editor, LA Times, on PSA Testing

29000 Men Comment
Below is a copy of my letter to the editor that was published in the LA Times on 10/27/2009. It was slightly shortened to conform to the 150 word limit. Eliminated was my comment that the annual prostate cancer death rate has dropped from the 40,000 men per year in the pre-PSA test era to the approximately 29,000 deaths per year today. If the current debate is successful in convincing men they do need to test and track their PSA, we very likely will see a return to the 40,000 per year death rate. This would mean that an additional 100,000 men would die unnecessarily from prostate cancer each decade.

I believe that we need to focus more on prostate cancer prevention and methods to effectively determine which cancers are the aggressive killers. See the Times letter below.

LA Times Opinion Section, October 27, 2009
Cancer risks and diagnoses

Re “With cancer, it’s always personal,” Oct. 25

Thank you for running Paul Lieberman's Op-Ed article on prostate and breast-cancer screening.

I would, however, retitle his article, "With Cancer, it's never real until it's personal. " My point is that one only comes to terms with cancer after we, personally, are diagnosed. The danger with the current discussion over prostate cancer testing is that the continual focus on possible post-treatment problems may drive the annual PSA testing rate below the current meager rate.

The principal issue with PSA testing is not with the number of men tested but with the treatment decisions made by cancer patients and their physicians. What men need is better information about prostate cancer risk and treatment options, but with real statistics about post-treatment side effects attached.

And, of course, the ability of physicians to be able to reliably differentiate between benign and aggressive forms of prostate cancer.

Robert W. Hess
Manhattan Beach

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/letters/

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Tour de USA 2010 for Prostate Cancer Awareness

29000 Men Comment

We are moving forward on our planning for our cross country (and back) motorcycle trip to raise awareness for prostate cancer. If you ride a motorcycle and are interested in the ride of a lifetime, pop on over to the TourdeUSA website and watch our TourdeUSA blog for details.

Monday, September 14, 2009

MyBikeInfo iPhone and iPod Touch Application

If you are a cyclist and use MyBikeInfo for iPhone/iPod Touch, just click the link below to receive infrequent updates about improvements and new functionality to MyBikeInfo iPhone/iPod Touch application. You may unsubscribe at any time. By the way, you can use MyBikeInfo to track information on your motorcycle, as well. Plus, with MyBikeInfo’s RSS functionality, you can have real-time feeds from all of your favorite websites in one handy place on your iPhone. Proceeds go to prostate cancer awareness and prevention.

http://29000men.us1.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=95aaf73102f9fd5323096e57f&id=819e716571

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

TSG, Inc. Releases MyBikeInfo iPhone Application


In these difficult economic times, it’s especially difficult for non-profit entities to raise funds to support their charitable missions. As a result, Robert Hess, CEO of TSG, Inc., and Founder and President of the Prostate Cancer Awareness Project (PCaAP), embarked on a program to create a self-funding mechanism for the PCaAP.

Because the PCaAP uses bicycling events to disseminate it’s “Early Detection, Early Treatment” message and to drive healthy lifestyle activities, the logical choice was something related to cycling. The result, after 9 months of technical development led by Mr. Prem Sundaram, is the MyBikeInfo iPhone application.

The application stores all of the information necessary for a proper positioning fit for an unlimited number of bicycles and includes the ability to create RSS feeds within the application. It’s available now in the iTunes application store. Full details are at http://www.mybikeinfo.com. Proceeds go to prostate cancer awareness and testing for men without medical insurance.

TSG, Inc. is pleased to pleased to support the Prostate Cancer Awareness Project.

Initial reviews look pretty good. See velogirlscoaching in San Francisco.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

"Just Do It" Seems to Hold True for Prostate Cancer Prevention

Rather than just surviving prostate cancer, wouldn't it be better to simply prevent it in the first place? You bet! But how can we do that when we don't know precisely what causes cancer?

Research is beginning to demonstrate a connection between lifestyle habits - exercise levels and nutritional patterns - that seem to have an effect on cancer occurrence. For example, a 2008 report cited in the Daily Mail in the United Kingdom revealed that men working in office jobs experienced a higher rate of prostate cancer than men that moved around during their workday. These results are in line with an American Cancer Society study that estimates that a third of all cancers can be traced to inactivity and nutritional shortcomings.

I'm not a physician, but it seems to me that "Just Doing It" - to paraphrase the Nike slogan - is a free and easy way to prevent yourself from becoming one of the one-in-six men who will experience prostate cancer. So, if you work in an office, it's time to get moving!

If you like to bicycle, consider joining us in August 2009 at the Tour of Skyline Drive in Virginia. We'll spend two days riding along the Skyline Drive in the Shenandoah National Park.

Remember to "Test. Track. Treat. Live." Track your PSA annually and look for a change of .75 or more, and ask your colleagues (35 and older) if they are testing.

Best regards, Robert