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Prostate Cancer Mortality
In recent medical studies, experts have found a number of links between decreased or increased incidence of prostate cancer mortality and a number of other factors.
One of the most prominent factor linked to a decrease or increase of prostate cancer mortality is diet.
Some experts claim that populations that consume more animal products, such as meat and milk, have much higher rates of prostate cancer. If you currently include a large amount of animal products in your diet, you may want to consider replacing them with cereals.
Additionally, these same experts claim that certain types of food can bolster your immune system’s ability to fight the onset of prostate disease and prostate cancer. These foods include fish, soybeans, seeds, and oils. Again, if you believe that you are at risk of prostate cancer, you will want to integrate these foods into your current diet.
Experts also claim that incidence of prostate cancer mortality is strongly linked with a given person’s willingness to receive screening and to take preventative measures.
Prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening–one of the newer methods of detecting prostate cancer–is one of these measures you can take as a person at risk. Throughout the 1990s, PSA was linked to decrease in prostate cancer mortality because it gave willing patients the chance to detect and treat this type of cancer in its earliest stages, preventing further deterioration of the prostate and growth to other parts of the body.
In addition to getting an early PSA and changing your diet, you should also consider taking further preventative action by reducing your tobacco and alcohol consumption, which have both been linked to prostate cancer complications and increased incidence of mortality. You should also reconsider your sexual habits, as some STDs have been linked to prostate complications.
Additionally, you may want to consider the environment in which you live. If you live close to a power plant or an incinerator, you may have a higher risk of prostate cancer, as well as a number of other cancers and pathology.
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