Young men turn to private healthcare for prostate cancer screening
Worried young men are increasingly paying for private prostate cancer tests as they are not eligible for them on the NHS , figures have revealed. Over the past three months Britain’s biggest online pharmacy has seen a 600 per cent rise in sales of blood tests that looks for signs of the disease. According to Pharmacy2U, men under 50 are most likely to order the prostate specific antigen (PSA) test. The trend followed the news last year that Olympic champion cyclist Sir Chris Hoy had terminal prostate cancer. He was diagnosed at 48, having never been offered a PSA test. NHS guidance states that men under 50 can have the test only if they have symptoms, which include difficulty urinating, erectile dysfunction, blood in the urine and semen, weight loss , back pain and loss of appetite. But most men with early-stage prostate cancer do not have any. Sir Chris – along with Prostate Cancer UK – is calling for the age at which men are offered the te...