Express. Home of the Daily and Sunday Express. HOME News Politics Royal Showbiz & TV Sport Comment Finance Travel Life & Style Life Cars Tech Garden Property Food Diets Health Style Express Wins A new study has shown that mental health support is worryingly lacking for prostate cancer patients By Samantha Leathers, Lifestyle Reporter
13: 32, Tue, Aug 6, 2024 | UPDATED: 13: 41, Tue, Aug 6, 2024
Researchers have found a lack of support for people diagnosed with prostate cancer (Image: GETTY)
Experts are calling for mental health screenings as research reveals a shocking lack of support during and after prostate cancer diagnoses. University of South Australia doctors and researchers are advocating for mental health screenings to be part of the standard procedure when diagnosing prostate cancer.
This comes after research showed patients urgently need more support both during and immediately after their diagnosis. The study, funded by Movember, involved over 13,000 South Australian men with prostate cancer. It found that 15% began taking mental health medications immediately after being diagnosed, while 6% sought help from mental health services.
Despite these already worrying figures, the study emphasised that this also reveals the worrying gap between those who seek help and those who likely need it. Up to 40% of prostate cancer patients are considered at risk of mental distress.
With over 24,000 people receiving the diagnosis each year, this leaves thousands without adequate mental health support during their illness.
While the survival rate for this type of cancer is high, survivors often face mental repercussions from their health scare. Psychological issues were one of the most frequently reported unmet needs among survivors.
Lead researcher Dr Tenaw Tiruye estimated that one in six patients experience clinical depression following their diagnosis.
The doctor, speaking to News Medical, highlighted the mental health crisis facing prostate cancer patients: “The rates of depression and anxiety among prostate cancer patients are significantly higher than those in the general population, as is the risk of suicide.”
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Dr Tiruye further commented on his study’s findings: “This shows that men are more likely to commence psychotropic medications than seek out mental health services. It also shows a significant gap, which is those men who have not sought help.”
Dr Kerri Beckmann, the senior researcher, called for societal shifts along with incorporating mental health care into standard prostate cancer diagnosis routines.
She pointed out the added stigma around mental health challenges that prostate cancer patients face, exacerbating the necessity for prompt support during their diagnosis period.
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