News & Comment

Filter By:

Article Type
Year
  • As the population of gender minorities grows in the setting of rising incidence of cancers globally, health-care professionals and institutions must be prepared to provide inclusive care. Individual-level training as well as institutional-level efforts on gender identity data collection and creation of inclusive clinical spaces could help mitigate health-care disparities.

    • David J. Benjamin
    • Omid Yazdanpanah
    • Arash Rezazadeh Kalebasty
    Comment
  • Definitions of sexual arousal dysfunction in the International Classification of Diseases use sex-specific binaries that omit the erectile basis of arousal in females. To provide equitable health care for all people with erectile dysfunction, these definitions must be de-gendered.

    • Lucy Greenwald
    • Daniel R. Dickstein
    • Deborah C. Marshall
    Comment
  • Asexuality is often neglected in education and conversations around sexuality, making it essentially an ‘invisible orientation’. This lack of knowledge is associated with harmful misconceptions, which need challenging within the medical profession and in the general population to ensure inclusion of people who identify on the asexual spectrum.

    • Sarah Cosgriff
    • Stella Schneckenburger
    Comment
  • Centralization of care for penile cancer has been underscored in the 2023 updated EAU–ASCO guidelines. Expertise consolidation enhances patient care, addressing penile cancer complexities from diagnosis to treatment. Centralization initiatives, like the European Reference Networks, and dedicated scientific societies have crucial roles in guiding centralized care pathways to ultimately improve patient outcomes.

    • Giuseppe Basile
    • Andrea Necchi
    • Peter A. S. Johnstone
    Comment
  • Autonomous surgical robots have the potential to transform surgery and increase access to quality health care. Advances in artificial intelligence have produced robots mimicking human demonstrations. This application might be feasible for surgical robots but is associated with obstacles in creating robots that emulate surgeon demonstrations.

    • Samuel Schmidgall
    • Ji Woong Kim
    • Axel Krieger
    Comment
  • The growing global burden of genitourinary cancers is disproportionately shouldered by low- and middle-income countries. Medical journals offer an avenue for discourse among different stakeholders to strategize and identify solutions. Thus, achieving diversity in this context is crucial to put together a heterogeneous group of stakeholders with diverse personal and cultural experiences as well as distinct problem-solving approaches.

    • David J. Benjamin
    • Zhaohui Arter
    • Arash Rezazadeh Kalebasty
    Comment