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Many Questions


Ggringo
(@ggringo)
Member Adventurer
Joined: 9 years ago
Posts: 963
Topic starter  

Prostate massage is not new, it's been practiced for centuries by our ancestors. It's also a known fact that prostate massage provides great health benefits and has been known to help reverse some conditions such as BPH and ED.

Knowing all this, why is it that the practice of prostate massage is not widely known or publicised? Is the topic being purposely snuffed my the medical community and if so why? Surely, it is being thought at medical schools throughout the world. Is it such a taboo topic because it involves back door action?

What percentage of the male population (even female) are aware of it? I'm sure I am not the only one who discovered this great phenomenon at the tender age of 60. Throughout my life, I had medical examinations and no doctor ever mentioned it to me although I was showing signs of BPH and ED. I sure would have liked to maintain my prostate in good health from my early 20s.

These questions have been haunting me since my discovery of Arenos (by pure hazard) six months ago. I feel I lost all these good years.

Anybody have any answers? I look forward to your opinion.


   
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(@lonewolf8)
Honorable Member Customer
Joined: 7 years ago
Posts: 570
 

While your questions are interesting and good, you're perhaps asking them in the wrong place 🙂
We all know about it, because we are here.

Would be interesting to see what friends, relatives, and colleagues on facebook would say... and how they would answer your questions.


   
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 rook
(@rook)
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Joined: 7 years ago
Posts: 2026
 

Yup... not new. Robin Williams had it in one of his stand-up monologues years ago. 🙂

I've asked my Uro how he views the value of the current crop of prostate massage tools to help with BPH symptoms. His response was that manual, "targeted massage" by a skilled therapist is no doubt superior to the various self-massage attempts by patients. In an office setting that massage will also be accompanied by lab tests to screen for various pathogens (much of that is 'defense medicine' for legal reasons). In the U.S. (and perhaps in Canada and the U.K.) this is quickly reduced to "billable" hours.

My Uro said that they ceased supporting routine/recurring prostate massage about 10 years ago. Reason: Their insurance providers were requiring individual letters of justification before the procedure. My thought... It's all about money.


   
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 rook
(@rook)
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Joined: 7 years ago
Posts: 2026
 

Pills, antibiotic and alfa-blockers cost less and avoid collisions with lawyers.


   
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(@goldenboy)
Noble Member Customer
Joined: 7 years ago
Posts: 936
 

A very interesting thread! It seems to me that there is a lot of 'alternative-medicine' out there if you only look for it. Are we putting too much faith and trust in our physicians? Rook wisely pointed out to look for the money trail. If there's no money in it for the physician and you are 'healed' what happens next? What about the Hippocratic Oath? Enough said!


   
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