From uro-oncologists’ perspectives: golf as a means of improving wellbeing among prostate cancer survivors

Prostate cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related death among men. Due to related societal limitations, the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic increases physical inactivity, which decreases cancer survivors’ functional capacity. As a result, golf might be a good way for prostate cancer survi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Supportive care in cancer 2022-09, Vol.30 (9), p.7053-7056
Hauptverfasser: Okechukwu, Chidiebere Emmanuel, Agag, Ayman, Naushad, Naufal, Abbas, Sami, Deb, Abdalla Ali
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container_issue 9
container_start_page 7053
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creator Okechukwu, Chidiebere Emmanuel
Agag, Ayman
Naushad, Naufal
Abbas, Sami
Deb, Abdalla Ali
description Prostate cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related death among men. Due to related societal limitations, the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic increases physical inactivity, which decreases cancer survivors’ functional capacity. As a result, golf might be a good way for prostate cancer survivors who have been fully vaccinated against coronavirus disease to improve their musculoskeletal function, cardiorespiratory fitness, psychological function, and general quality of life. Aerobic activity’s ability to adjust hormone levels, prevent obesity, increase immunological function, and lower oxidative stress have all been identified as reasons for its benefit for prostate cancer survivors. Prostate cancer survivors must first complete a fitness evaluation supervised and recommended by a certified clinical exercise physiologist after consultations with a urologic oncologist before enrolling in a cancer-specific community golf program. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing is currently the gold standard technique for the evaluation of cardiopulmonary fitness. Prostate cancer survivors should be placed in a group with regard to their fitness level if they pass this fitness test. Prostate cancer survivors can be grouped into four to five groups at a time. Golfing activities should include warm-up, driving range, and course activities (on-course golf play twice a week for a duration of 90 min per day or 180 min per week at moderate-intensity). From the uro-oncologists’ point of view, prostate cancer survivors can benefit from group-based community golf programs that can be recommended and designed for them through the collaboration of their physician and a certified exercise professional.
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subjects Cancer survivors
Commentary
Coronavirus infections
Coronaviruses
Exercise
Golf
Health aspects
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Mens health
Nursing
Nursing Research
Oncology
Pain Medicine
Physical fitness
Prevention
Prostate cancer
Quality of life
Rehabilitation Medicine
Survivor
Type 2 diabetes
title From uro-oncologists’ perspectives: golf as a means of improving wellbeing among prostate cancer survivors
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