Whanganui District Health Board (WDHB) staff are being urged to wear blue on Tuesday 20 June to show their support for Whanganui's inaugural Blueday dedicated to raising awareness about men's cancer.
WDHB health promoter Sarah Hawken says Blueday has been timed to take place in Whanganui's Men's Health Month - another inaugural event launched and supported locally in June.
"One area of focus for Men's Health Month is men's cancers which is a huge and very worrying issue for men nationwide," Ms Hawken says. "The figures are very sobering."
+Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in New Zealand men. It mainly affects men over 50 years of age, and it kills more than 600 Kiwi men every year.
+Around 1500 New Zealand men are diagnosed with bowel cancer each year and most bowel cancer occurs in people over 50.
+Skin cancer is another common cancer in New Zealand. The most serious skin
cancer is melanoma with around 1200 men diagnosed each year.
+While testicular cancer is quite rare, around 150 men are diagnosed annually. It is a cancer that occurs most in younger men aged 18-39 years.
+Lung cancer is the leading cause of death from cancer in New Zealand men, with around 900 men dying each year.
Ms Hawken says families and loved ones are losing husbands, sons, brothers and fathers to deaths which, in some cases, could have been prevented if the men had booked regular health checks.