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Here's a brief guide to preparing to confront the new diagnosis

of prostate cancer (PCa):

Welcome to the club no one wants to join.

I have some suggestions that will help to make well-informed

decisions.

Anecdotes contributed by other patients can be interesting, but

should never, ever, be relied upon as authority for one's own

decisions. In other words, what helps me might harm you and vice

versa.

" Find people who are more interested in helping you to learn than

teaching you what *they* think you need to know. "

-- Young, PCa Mentor

Phoenix 5

There is a lot to do.

(1) If applicable, I recommend having the biopsy specimens

examined by

a pathology lab that specializes in prostate cancer (PCa). Everything

that is done from here on depends upon the accuracy of the Gleason

scoring. Here is a list of such labs:

Bostwick Laboratories [800] 214-6628

Dianon Laboratories [800] 328-2666 (select 5 for client services)

Jon Epstein (s Hopkins) [410] 955-5043 or [410] 955-2162

Jon Oppenheimer (Tennessee) [800] 881-0470

Lucia (303)724-3470

This is a " second opinion " and should be covered by

insurance/Medicare. The cost, last I heard, was about $500. More

if further tests, which might be prudent, are ordered.

The chosen lab can give instructions on shipment arrangements.

In civilized jurisdictions, those specimens are the property of the

patient and not the medic nor the lab. Sometimes it is necessary to

educate them on that point.

(2) The authoritative website of the Prostate Cancer Research

Institute (PCRI) at http://www.prostate-cancer.org/pcricms/

is an excellent beginning.

See also http://www.prostate-cancer.org/pcricms/node/126 if newly

diagnosed.

Some access to medics who specialize in treatment (tx) of PCa are

listed via

this portal: http://www.prostate-cancer.org/pcricms/node/38

If a particular medic is not suitable due to distance (but there

are men who travel thousands of miles for treatment) or

otherwise, there is no harm and much possible gain in simply

asking for a referral.

There are also men whose primary medic is some distance away, but

who receive their routine treatment (tx) near home.

(3) I heartily recommend this comprehensive text on PCa: _A

Primer on Prostate Cancer_ 2nd ed., subtitled " The Empowered

Patient's Guide " by medical oncologist and PCa specialist

B. Strum, MD and PCa warrior

Donna Pogliano. It is available from the PCRI website and the

like, as

well as Amazon (30+ five-star reviews), & Noble, and

bookstores. A lifesaver, as I very well know.

(4) Personal contact with other patients can be very helpful. Local

chapters of the international support group Us Too can be found via

their website at http://www.ustoo.com/chapter_nearyou.asp

Regards,

Steve J

" Empowerment: taking responsibility for and authority over one's own

outcomes based on education and knowledge of the consequences and

contingencies involved in one's own decisions. This focus

provides the

uplifting energy that can sustain in the face of crisis. "

--Donna Pogliano, co-author of _A Primer on Prostate Cancer_,

subtitled

" The Empowered Patient's Guide. "

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