The largest blog for reading the latest medical research on all disease, the prevention and its treatment . Pulled from variety of sources

Monday, November 14, 2016

Jessica Simpson's father Joe, 58, diagnosed with prostate cancer : dailymail





as informed in dailymail

Jessica Simpson's father Joe, 58, diagnosed with prostate cancer

Jessica Simpson's father Joe, 58, diagnosed with prostate cancer
Jessica Simpson's father Joe, 58, diagnosed with prostate cancer
Jessica Simpson's father Joe has been diagnosed with prostate cancer.The 58-year-old photographer confirmed the news to People on Monday.It was also revealed he has undergone surgery and is already back at work.'He's feeling great now and is optimistic,' a source close to Simpson said.


moreover from news1130

New research finds greater link between alcohol use and prostate cancer

New research finds greater link between alcohol use and prostate cancer
New research finds greater link between alcohol use and prostate cancer
VICTORIA (NEWS 1130) – In the midst of another Movember fundraiser for men's health and prostate cancer initiatives, a new study is linking alcohol consumption and prostate cancer.This connection has been made before, but what's new is a very clear dose-response relationship, according to the University of Victoria Centre for Addictions Research of BC (CARBC)."Which means the risk is just as you say, 'the more you drink, the bigger the risk,' and we also have evidence that the association has been underestimated," explains CARBC director Dr. Tim Stockwell.The main reason it has been underestimated is because of what researchers call abstainer bias, where unhealthy former drinkers make current alcohol users look better by comparison.


in the same way 9news

Alcohol volume linked to prostate cancer

Alcohol volume linked to prostate cancer
Alcohol volume linked to prostate cancer
The more men drink, the greater their risk of developing prostate cancer, according to a new study.Australian and Canadian researchers have found new evidence of a significant link between alcohol consumption and prostate cancer.And it's not regular, high-level drinkers who are just at risk."Our study finds, for he first time, a significant dose-response relationship between the level of alcohol intake and risk of prostate cancer," the researchers wrote in their paper published in medical journal BMC Cancer.


No comments:

Post a Comment