Fear does more damage than cancer ever could.
According to Dr. Stephen Petteruti, fear is the single most common reason men make prostate cancer decisions they later regret. Anxiety compresses time. Urgency replaces thought. And once a decision is irreversible, clarity often arrives too late.
This...
For many men, prostate cancer decisions feel like standing in front of a moving train.
- PSA rises.
- The referral is made.
- The biopsy is scheduled.
And suddenly, it feels irresponsible to slow down.
According to Dr. Stephen Petteruti, that momentum is not medicine. It is inertia. And inertia i...
How to Talk With Your Doctor About Prostate Cancer Without Pressure
An elevated PSA or a concerning MRI can trigger anxiety and urgency. Too often, that fear is followed by pressure to move quickly toward biopsy, surgery, or radiation. But urgency does not equal necessity.
According to Dr. Stephen...