Publications by authors named "James D Holt"

Whether to screen for prostate cancer in aging men is a topic that is fairly well researched, but recommendations are controversial, because the evidence supporting any recommendation is equivocal. The evidence clearly does not support routine screening of all average-risk men, but for men aged 55 to 69 years, either not routinely screening, or engaging each man in shared decision making for his individual preference on screening, is reasonable and consistent with the evidence. Many organizations, including the American Cancer Society, have not yet reassessed their guidelines, in response to the US Preventative Services Task Force revised guideline.

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Navigating Long-Term Care.

Gerontol Geriatr Med

March 2017

Americans over age 65 constitute a larger percentage of the population each year: from 14% in 2010 (40 million elderly) to possibly 20% in 2030 (70 million elderly). In 2015, an estimated 66 million people provided care to the ill, disabled, and elderly in the United States. In 2000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 15 million Americans used some form of long-term care: adult day care, home health, nursing home, or hospice.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Chronic prostatitis, affecting 1.8% to 8.2% of individuals, can arise from factors that introduce bacteria into the urinary system, as well as conditions causing chronic pain; distinguishing it from other chronic pelvic pain causes is crucial.
  • - The National Institutes of Health categorizes prostatitis into four types, with chronic bacterial prostatitis (CBP) and chronic nonbacterial prostatitis (CNP)/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) being the primary types linked to pelvic pain and urinary symptoms.
  • - Treatment varies: while CBP may respond to antibiotics, CNP/CPPS, which makes up over 90% of chronic prostatitis cases, requires a more tailored approach involving medications
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