PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Upfront mental health supports for men with prostate cancer

2024-08-04
(Press-News.org) Mental health screenings must be incorporated in routine prostate cancer diagnoses say University of South Australia researchers. The call follows new research that shows men need more supports both during and immediately after a diagnosis of prostate cancer.

 

Funded by Movember, the UniSA study tracked the scale and timing of mental health issues among 13,693 South Australian men with prostate cancer, finding that 15% of prostate cancer patients began mental health medications directly after a prostate cancer diagnosis, with 6% seeking help from mental health services.

 

It’s an important finding, not only highlighting the percentage of prostate cancer patients who seek mental health supports, but notably, those who do not.

 

Every year, more than 24,000 men are diagnosed with prostate cancer, with up to 40% of patients considered at risk of mental distress.

 

Lead researcher UniSA’s Dr Tenaw Tiruye says the study highlights an acute need to offer mental health services and support for all men diagnosed with prostate cancer.

 

“Prostate cancer is the most common cancer affecting Australian men. But despite high survival rates, psychological issues are one of the most frequently reported unmet needs among prostate cancer survivors,” Dr Tiruye says.

 

“Prostate cancer can take a serious toll on the mental health of men throughout all stages of the illness – including diagnosis, surveillance, treatment, and follow‐up – with an estimated one in six people experiencing clinical depression.

 

“In fact, the rates of depression and anxiety among prostate cancer patients are significantly higher than those in the general population, as is the risk of suicide.

 

“In our study we found that 15% of patients started anti-anxiety and antidepression medications at the time of their diagnosis, and that 6% looked for mental health support. This shows that men are more likely to commence psychotropic medications than seek out mental health services.

 

“But it also shows a significant gap, which is those men who have not sought help.”

 

Senior researcher, UniSA’s Dr Kerri Beckmann says fewer than a quarter of men ask for help when it comes to their mental health.

 

“Whether it’s the stigma surrounding mental health, or a fear about being seen as weak, statistics shows that many men struggle to seek help for mental health concerns,” Dr Beckmann says.

 

“So, rather than waiting for men to proactively seek out mental health supports once they’ve been diagnosed with prostate cancer, we should be offering supports at the time of diagnosis and throughout treatment. That way it can be seen as a normal and required part of treatment.

 

“Only by normalising mental health discussions, can we improve access to wellbeing tools and services, to ensure that men with prostate cancer have every opportunity to voice their struggles and receive the support they need.”

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Media contact: Annabel Mansfield M: +61 479 182 489 E: Annabel.Mansfield@unisa.edu.au
Maddie Rawlings E: Maddie.Rawlings@unisa.edu.au
Contact for interview:  Dr Tenaw Tiruye E: Tenaw.Tiruye@unisa.edu.au
 

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Strengthening global regulatory capacity for equitable access to vaccines in public health emergencies

2024-08-03
WASHINGTON – Three high-impact steps could be taken by global health leaders to reshape the global regulatory framework and help address the pressing need for equitable access to diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines during public health emergencies, say a Georgetown global health law expert and a medical student. In their “Perspective” published today in the New England Journal of Medicine, Georgetown School of Health professor Sam Halabi, JD, and George O’Hara, a Georgetown medical student and David E. Rogers Student ...

Sex chromosomes may reduce “sexual conflict” during evolution

Sex chromosomes may reduce “sexual conflict” during evolution
2024-08-03
Tokyo, Japan – Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have taken a big step in solving the mystery around why animals evolve sex chromosomes. It had long been proposed that sex chromosomes evolve to reduce “sexual conflict,” the evolution of features which are sub-optimal for either sex. By using fruit flies, the team showed that genes on newly formed neo-sex chromosomes in fruit flies tend to evolve “sex-biased genes” which give sex-specific phenotypes.   Chromosomes are neatly packaged bundles of DNA that carry all the genetic material of an organism. While prokaryotes ...

A blueprint for building the future: Eco-friendly 3D concrete printing

A blueprint for building the future: Eco-friendly 3D concrete printing
2024-08-02
A research team led by engineers at the University of Virginia School of Engineering and Applied Science is the first to explore how an emerging plant-based material, cellulose nanofibrils, could amplify the benefits of 3D-printed concrete technology. “The improvements we saw on both printability and mechanical measures suggest that incorporating cellulose nanofibrils in commercial printable materials could lead to more resilient and eco-friendly construction practices sooner rather than later,” said Osman E. Ozbulut, a professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental ...

A Bronze Age technology could aid the switch to clean energy

2024-08-02
Technology with roots going back to the Bronze Age may offer a fast and inexpensive solution to help achieve the United Nations climate goal of net zero emissions by 2050, according to recent Stanford-led research in PNAS Nexus. The technology involves assembling heat-absorbing bricks in an insulated container, where they can store heat generated by solar or wind power for later use at the temperatures required for industrial processes. The heat can then be released when needed by passing air through channels in the stacks of “firebricks,” thus allowing cement, steel, glass, and paper factories to run on renewable energy even when wind and sunshine ...

What researchers know about the genetic complexity of schizophrenia, to date

What researchers know about the genetic complexity of schizophrenia, to date
2024-08-02
Patrick Sullivan, MD, FRANZCP, the Yeargan Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Genetics at the UNC School of Medicine, and researchers at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, have developed a comprehensive outline of the genetics of schizophrenia. The review was published in Nature Reviews Neuroscience. Schizophrenia is a neuropsychiatric disorder featuring recurrent episodes of psychosis – such as hallucinations, delusions, and disorganized thinking – with many patients developing apathy, social withdrawal, ...

New study highlights scale and impact of long COVID

2024-08-02
In a new review paper, researchers from the Universities of Arizona, Oxford and Leeds analyzed dozens of previous studies into long COVID to examine the number and range of people affected, the underlying mechanisms of disease, the many symptoms that patients develop, and current and future treatments. Long COVID, also known as Post-COVID-19 condition, is generally defined as symptoms persisting for three months or more after acute COVID-19. The condition can affect and damage many organ systems, leading to severe ...

How the rising earth in Antarctica will impact future sea level rise

2024-08-02
COLUMBUS, Ohio – The rising earth beneath the Antarctic Ice Sheet will likely become a major factor in future sea level rise, a new study suggests.  Despite feeling like a stationary mass, most solid ground is undergoing a process of deformation, sinking and rising in response to many environmental factors. In Antarctica, melting glacial ice means less weight on the bedrock below, allowing it to rise. How the rising earth interacts with the overlying ice sheet to affect sea level rise is not well-studied, said Terry Wilson, co-author of the study and a senior research scientist at the Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center ...

Research spotlight: Uncovering the links between sleep struggles, substance abuse and suicidal thoughts in teens with depression

2024-08-02
Rebecca Robbins, PhD, of the Division of Sleep and Circadian Disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, is the senior author of a paper published in Psychiatry Research, “Exploring sleep difficulties, alcohol, illicit drugs, and suicidal ideation among adolescents with a history of depression.” How would you summarize your study for a lay audience? Suicide is one of the leading causes of death for adolescents in the U.S. We know, due to previous research, that difficulty falling asleep or waking up too early as well as abuse of prescription ...

Boosting children’s voices could help to relieve significant backlogs in the family court, study says

2024-08-02
  Giving children a right to be heard and taken seriously when parents separate could help couples reach sustainable child arrangements and relieve significant backlogs in the family court, avoiding unnecessary financial and emotional costs, a new study says. Mediation, court and legal processes should provide a forum for young people’s views on post-separation arrangements being considered for them to be aired independently and factored in wherever appropriate. Giving them more agency about decisions which affect their lives and futures will help families make more effective ...

Study yields new insights into the link between global warming and rising sea levels

Study yields new insights into the link between global warming and rising sea levels
2024-08-02
A McGill-led study suggests that Earth's natural forces could substantially reduce Antarctica’s impact on rising sea levels, but only if carbon emissions are swiftly reduced in the coming decades. By the same token, if emissions continue on the current trajectory, Antarctic ice loss could lead to more future sea level rise than previously thought. The finding is significant because the Antarctic Ice Sheet is the largest ice mass on Earth, and the biggest uncertainty in predicting future sea levels is how this ice will respond to climate change. “With nearly 700 million people living in coastal areas and the potential ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Immune system discovery reveals potential solution to Alzheimer’s

Salamanders suffering from rising temperatures

It’s not too late to start eating better for your brain

Study finds seniors are money savvy – until dementia sets in

Synthetic compound shows promise against multidrug resistance

Researchers recreate ancient Egyptian blues

Immunotherapy before surgery improves lung cancer survival in global clinical trial led by Irish cancer specialist

S2302 Pragmatica-Lung reports out as model for faster, leaner, more representative trials

New Venus observation mission - World's first long-term planetary cubesat study by Korea’s Institute for Basic Science and NanoAvionics

Brain training game offers new hope for drug-free pain management

Attachment theory: A new lens for understanding human-AI relationships

Self-powered artificial synapse mimics human color vision

Circadian preference is associated with impulsivity in adolescents

Space pebbles and rocks play pivotal role in giant planet’s formation

Still on the right track? Researchers at the University of Graz enable reliable monitoring of the Paris climate goals

Study finds coastal flooding more frequent than previously thought

Why forests aren’t coming back after gold mining in the Amazon

Webb reveals the origin of the ultra-hot exoplanet WASP-121b

New therapy to overcome treatment-resistant skin cancers

Research alert: Molecular stress in old neurons increases susceptibility to neurodegenerative diseases, study finds

Study provides new insights into the genetic complexity of cancer metastasis

The heart of female elite athletes adapts differently than those of male elite athletes

The ”immune system” of a safe and equal Europe is in danger, according to researchers

Does a culturally tailored quality of life intervention benefit Latina breast cancer survivors and caregivers?

‘A love affair with the sea’: Meet a scientist who overcame hurdles to dedicate her life to studying the ocean

Sea change in cancer care requires urgent action to strengthen oncology workforce, care delivery

Board game enables autistic people to create stories about their condition

Information entropy untangles vortices and flows in turbulent plasmas

Overall survival and quality-of-life superiority in modern phase 3 oncology trials

Not-so-tasty: Plastic particles found in food could harm the body

[Press-News.org] Upfront mental health supports for men with prostate cancer