What They Say About Prostate Cancer
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“It’s one of the worst cancers to die of. It’s characterized by widespread bone pain, which is almost an intractable pain for us to deal with, and the terminal phases last a year or two or even longer.”
--Thomas E. Ahlering
MD, chief of urology,
UC Irvine College
of Medicine
“Search for the first time the word ‘prostate’ was mentioned in your newspaper. It was not before 1960 or ‘70, I’ll tell you that, even though it was a major disease in this country. No one talked about this.”
--Donald F. Coffey
Director of prostate
research, Johns Hopkins
University, Baltimore
“It is my belief that the harm of screening [for prostate cancer] is proven, and the benefits are theoretical. There are men who are diagnosed who have cancer, and if the cancer was never treated they would be a lot better off. The cure has lots of side effects.”
--Otis Brawley
Urologist, National
Cancer Institute,
Bethesda, Md.
“Traditionally, a physician would make a recommendation and the patient would accept it. Now patients share in the decision process. That’s a major change. Doctors don’t always realize that the patient’s goal may differ from the physician’s goal. Physicians have personal bias. Surgeons recommend surgery; radiotherapists recommend radiation therapy. It makes the choices difficult.”
--Gerald Chodak
Urologist, director of
Weiss Memorial Hospital
prostate center, Chicago
“I wouldn’t wish this on Adolf Hitler.”
--Dying prostate
cancer patient who
asked not to
be identified