#1 Nursing Resource: 806,000 unique visitors per month

Log in   Sign up   Why join?   | Layout: Switch to narrow layout Color: gold style blue style rose style
Nursing Community for Nurses
Home Forums Articles Specialty Students Region Career Resources

Advanced Search Site Help Site Map

Per UN: Nov. 3 named 'World Male Day' to Focus Attention on Men's Health Issues



Currently Online
Members: 374
Guests: 3,306
3,680

Job Spotlight
ER & L&D RN
Houston, Texas
Forum Spotlight
Distance Learning for Nursing

Nursing Degrees

Nursing Articles

It is my X-ray
Thanksgiving Humor
Halloween Humor
Night Nurse III: Slip-Slidin' Awaaaaaaay
Lights out
Stand at attention!!!
2 am admission
funny nursing stories
Night Nurse II: I Tawt I Taw A Puddy-Tat!
Orientation Day LPN to RN
Submit An Article

Nursing Jobs

Job Seeker: Employer:

Scrubs & Gear

Newsletter

Interested in the hottest topics of the week? Subscribe to the free allnurses.com Nurse-zine Newsletter.

Enter email address:


Read current:
Nursing Newsletter

How-To allnurses

allnurses videos

Welcome to allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses

The largest most active online nursing community. Join 311,096 nurses from around the world to learn, communicate, and network. For full allnurses.com access, register today - it's free! Problems during registration? Please don't hesitate to contact support.

Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.
 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old Nov 04, 2001, 07:44 PM
NRSKarenRN's Avatar
Co-Administrator
Join Date: Oct 2000
Per UN: Nov. 3 named 'World Male Day' to Focus Attention on Men's Health Issues

'World Male Day' to Focus Attention on Men's Health Issues
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LONDON (Reuters Health) Nov 01
http://nurses.medscape.com/reuters/p...01publ007.html

The United Nations has named November 3 "World Male Day." On that day, the International Society for Men's Health and the European Men's Health Forum will be launched, and the First World Congress on Men's Health will begin in Vienna, Austria.

These events are happening none too soon, editorialists say in the November 3rd issue of the British Medical Journal. "There is an urgent need to advertise and promote men's health in a positive way," write Dr. Siegfried Meryn of the University of Vienna and Dr. Alejandro R. Jadad of the University of Toronto in Canada.

Of particular concern, they note, is the higher mortality rates that men experience for all 15 leading causes of death and their significantly shorter life expectancy compared with women.

One obstacle to improving men's health, writes Dr. Ian Banks, of the European Men's Health Forum in London, is their delay in presenting to a physician when they have health problems. He attributes this behavior in part to the "male-unfriendly" atmosphere of the general health practice, in which most receptionists and nurses are women and reception areas cater to the needs of women and children, rarely to those of men.

Dr. Banks points out that men are given less of a physician's time during a health visit than women are. One study found, he says, that whereas breast self-examinations are discussed by 86% of physicians when seeing women, only 29% routinely provide instruction on testicular self-examination to men.

"The goals of the World Congress on Men's Health are to highlight the issues surrounding men's health, which are pretty common throughout the developed world," Dr. Banks told Reuters Health in a telephone interview after he arrived in Vienna for the Congress. "That is, men tend to use health services poorly, so that problems common to men and women have a worse prognosis in men because they're picked up much later."

Dr. Banks noted that presenters at the Congress "hope to impress on governments the need to improve health services for men. In school, for instance, in the UK there is not one single comic directed toward adolescent boys that deals with sex or relationship issues, whereas there are many comics for girls that deal with those issues."

He continued, "So boys very quickly get the impression that health is a women's issue, rather than men's, even that men shouldn't talk about health issues because you're less of a man if you do so."

Dr. Banks believes that individual physicians need to take responsibility for the negative impression they may leave with men. He explained, "The way that doctors are trained is very macho, in that we're taught to never admit that we're wrong, to always say that we know what to do, to be very self-reliant. The way we're trained can impact on the way we interact with male patients."

BMJ 2001;323:1013-1014.

Top
  #2  
Old Nov 05, 2001, 08:27 AM
debbyed's Avatar
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Thumbs up Thanks for the info.........

I'm glad to see Men's heath being talked about openly.........it's certainly taken long enough. A large percentage of the male population ignore health care until they can no longer function or are dragged unconscious into the ER. With more publicity maybe we can help expand the males life span as was as productivity.

In this day an age men know about Prostrate problems but a large majority still think only women get breast cancer. Education is badly needed so that both men and women can live longer, healther lives. There are entirely to many widows out there.

{When I get that age, I'd like to have a few more men to pick from}

Top
Sponsored Links
 
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Shift in Health-Cost Focus Is Said to Show Promise NRSKarenRN Nursing Activism/ Healthcare Politics 0 Jul 26, 2007 03:51 AM
How do you focus when you have personal issues?? wannabenursetx Pre-Nursing Student Forum 19 Jul 16, 2007 08:30 PM


Currently Active Users Viewing: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search



New To Site?
Need Help?

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:05 PM.

Per UN: Nov. 3 named 'World Male Day' to Focus Attention on Men's Health Issues

Copyright © 1996-2008, allnurses.com. All rights reserved.  allnurses.com, Inc. Advertising Information