Improving Health and Wellness of men and boys!
Visitor blog feature:
Ansley Chartrand, Spring 2025 Intern with Men’s Health Network
Preventive care is a fundamental part of the healthcare system in the United States, with its main aim of reducing the frequency of transportation of communicable and non -contagious diseases.
The feature of preventive care is its goal to stop the diseases from appearance, which in turn reduces the spread if they are contagious. Unfortunately, men do not interact with primary or preventive care to the level they need, and this results in a higher mortality rate for men in most diseases (Baker, 2021). This is not a matter of cause, obstacles to men who interact with preventive care are multifaceted and appear in all the United States. Some possible causes for the low use of preventive care in men are largely inhabited in social stigma, mistrust in health professionals and a sense of assimilation.
These issues for men also intersect with widespread obstacles, such as access to health care, quality and cost, making men even less likely to seek treatment.
In addition, social stigma and traditional gender standards are some of the biggest obstacles for men seeking preventive and primary care.
Most men are socially pressured to deal with only their problems or to avoid seeking help. If they seek help, they face the fear of being considered “weak” by others. Many men avoid dealing with this fear either consciously or subconsciously by avoiding treatment and/or refuse to reveal symptoms to health professionals. The social spots that have gone through most men since they were children, lead more men to avoid care until they cannot. Many of these social pressures come from within and more difficult to deal with. Since many men will seek health care when they can no longer ignore their symptoms, the purpose of preventive care is lost.
Consequently, delay in treatment or loss of preventive services, illness or condition will be significantly more difficult to address (Powell et al., 2019).
Beyond the social stigma, there are systematic obstacles to preventive efforts that have negatively affected men and have only worsened in recent years.
In an attempt to catch women’s health, there has been an excessive compensation for the preventive resources that devote to women resulting in a possible gap on men’s preventive services. (Baker, 2021). With more and more precautionary ads as well as non -men’s interventions, many men are left behind and ignored. The combination of men who interact with less preventive services and preventive services that do not focus on men take place an exponential impact of degraded preventive care.
The creation of spaces where men feel comfortable sharing their experiences and promoting the supplies that focus on men’s health is increasingly increasing, as these inequalities become more intense in the eyes of statistical diseases.
Doctor-patient trust is always important to men, professionals who extend empathy should be approached differently when dealing with male patients.
This gender temperament must be treated in current education for patient care.
In addition, African -American men experience this medical professional mistrust at an increased level compared to non -black men (Powell et al., 2019). The American history of black men who lie from their doctors is deeply rooted and is always so present in today’s African -American populations. The intersection of men who do not seek preventive care and black people who distrust their doctors have increased the chance of blacks to avoid preventive care. An effect of this junction is evidenced by black men who have the lowest life expectancy of all other populations in the United States (Powell et al., 2019). Systematic issues affect black male dual duals from preventive services that reject men and the healthcare system that have chronic racism that has rooted on its foundations. The awareness of this convergence of preventive barriers is essential for all intervention plans.
In addition, medical mistrust is something that cannot be ignored to help reduce current life expectancy between men and women. Starting with the educational environment for public health students, medical students and all other future health professionals is a strategy for tackling the present distrust and gap in patient care.
Deep systemic issues must be uprooted and discussed early in the career of medical professionals to provide improved abnormal care.
A point of insecurity for men resides in sexual health.
The idea that a person will seek treatment for sexual health can present him as less male in the eyes of society. Men diagnosed with prostate, bladder or colon cancer can have an increased sense of confidence. The treatment of treatment depends to a large extent on the patient and if the patient feels uncomfortable with the treatment or prevention test, there is a lesser chance of participating in prevention or treatment (Zhu & Wittmann, 2022). Control for these cancers and the awareness of the impact has reached most of the American male population. Now the mortality rate is reduced by increasing the rates of appearance, this means that more men deal with psychosocial symptoms associated with diagnosis of their cancer (Zhu & Wittmann, 2022). Psychosocial influence can aggravate natural symptoms such as erectile dysfunction and libido, which can push patients’ confidence further into the negative, resulting in the most stigmatized fear.
Socially, many men are pressured to be sure of their sex life and having a disease associated with it can seriously affect their recovery and attachment.
In addition, the fear of being considered as a homosexual or experiencing homophobia will prevent those who seek help for HIV.
To explain, HIV of sexually transmitted disease (human immunodeficiency virus) is combined with the great social union that occurs only to homosexuals. This stereotype exists largely due to HIV and AIDS (lack of immune system lack of immune system) that occurred in the 1980s. In the 1980s, HIV/AIDS misinformation that lived only in homosexual men spread throughout the country. The story surrounding HIV had waterfalls that still affect patients’ treatment today. To discuss, current prevention drugs are not used as a consequence of these social stigma (Pleuhs et al., 2020). One of these drugs is called pre -report pre -exhibition (PREP) and is able to prevent HIV infection. Increasing the production of this drug is important for any sexually active or involved in the use of infusion drugs.
Men are greatly affected by HIV virus as a result of the use of low promotional care (Pleuhs et al., 2020).
Increasing awareness of HIV/AIDS is important to overturn the years of the stigma surrounding this condition and for increasing the use of prevention drugs.
In summary, much of the male underpinning of health care and preventive services is due to social obstacles.
These social obstacles exacerbate all other cross -barriers to the US healthcare system, African -American men and men part of the LGBTQ+community. The inaction of prevention services between men is generally observed in non -contagious diseases or STDs, such as cancers and HIV, but also has less debated influence on infectious diseases. This was explained in the Corona pandemic in 2020 when “… more men than women have died from Covid -9 to 41 of 47 countries” (Griffith et al., 2020). The causes of inequality in the rate of mortality associated with the disease are incompatible and are parallel to other obstacles to preventive care in men. These obstacles should be addressed by public health professionals and medical professionals, and the prophectivity of systematic prejudices are essential for changes. Focusing on men with intersecting obstacles to care should be identified in the development of research and intervention.
Treating the lack of use of prevention can be overthrown by the concentration of stakeholders, such as the men’s health network, to work truly to change the use of medical services between men.
I believe that these issues have been scanned under the population carpet at risk and men have been left behind as a result.
Sources:
Baker, P. (2021, 5 May). Men and Primary Care: Removing barriers.
Ansley Chartrand is currently a senior studying public health science at the University of Maryland. She plans to attend her undergraduate education by studying epidemiology in a Master of Public Health program. He also works at the Maryland University Aerobiology Laboratory of Public Health and has experience with bioereosol bioeneelis collection devices. In her spare time, she enjoys reading, lifting and playing basketball.