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Guest posts

Getting men checked early is key

MEN’S HEALTH SUPPLEMENT: Dr David Molony and Dr Paul Morrison know that men are less likely to go to doctors, so it is vital that doctors find a way to reach out to them {openx:269} Over the last two decades in particular, much has been gained in the fight against cardiovascular disease and the lowering of both mortality and morbidity

Rheumatic diseases in men

MEN’S HEALTH SUPPLEMENT: Dr Robert Coughlan, Consultant Rheumatologist at Merlin Park Hospital, Galway looks at the management of gout and ankylosing spondylitis as they present in men {openx:269} Gout and ankylosing spondylitis (AS) are two rheumatic diseases that are more common in men than in women.

Clinical developments in hypertension management

MEN’S HEALTH SUPPLEMENT: Prof Eoin O’Brien outlines the benefits of ambulatory blood pressure management and looks at the development of the ‘flexipill’ as the next generation of drug treatment {openx:269} The technique for measuring blood pressure was introduced into clinical medicine in 1896 and has survived largely unchanged for over a century, despite being inherently inaccurate.

Prostate cancer therapy choices

MEN’S HEALTH SUPPLEMENT: Mr David Bouchier-Hayes argues that many state-of-the art therapies for prostate cancer are done only sporadically in Ireland, including robotic laparascopic radical prostatectomy {openx:269} Prostate cancer continues to be a major healthcare problem, both for patients and those involved in the delivery of care to these patients.

Drug developments improve outlook

MEN’S HEALTH SUPPLEMENT: Rory Hafford reports from Stockholm on the launch of degarelix and also takes a look at two other pharmaceutical agents used in the fight against prostate cancer {openx:269} Stockholm was cold on the day that the drug Firmagon (degarelix) was launched; but the reception it got from the world’s urologists was a decidedly warm welcome.

Osteoporosis and vitamin D deficiency in men

MEN’S HEALTH SUPPLEMENT: Dr Robert Coughlan looks at the reasons why men develop osteoporosis and suggests treatment options {openx:269} Osteoporosis is a state of altered bone architecture that increases the risk of fragility fractures.

Does the freedom to die enhance lives?

Shane Leavy reports on a recent talk in Ireland by the controversial Australian Dr Philip Nitschke, who took part in the world’s first legal, physician-assisted suicide in 1996 {openx:269} In 1996, an Australian man suffering from prostate cancer had a needle, attached to a computer, inserted into his arm.

‘Stinging cream’ still prescribed by GPs

Aoife Connors investigates the claims made in a new study, which says GPs are prescribing aqueous cream incorrectly for eczema {openx:269} General practitioners are unknowingly prescribing aqueous cream as a leave-on emollient in the treatment of atopic eczema.

Society sets new treatment standards

Brian Herron reports on the Infusion Nurses Society and examines how infusion treatments are set to move into the community {openx:269} The launch of the Irish and UK branches of the Infusion Nurses Society (INS) has been a huge success, according to the organisation.

Who decides the health agenda?

Shocked by the scandal at Tallaght, Dr Ruairi Hanley laments that our healthcare priorities seem to be decided not by clinical experts, but by the subjective, random outrage of the media {openx:269} You really have to admire the HSE.