[ Sign up for our Health IQ newsletter for the latest coronavirus updates ]This includes the iconic parade, which Johner said he’s disappointed about missing — as it’s an annual highlight — but he understands that safety is more important.
Many men ‘in the dark’ when it comes to prostate cancer: study “Because of the uniqueness of the format this year, we don’t have that attention-grabbing parade that has become so iconic, I guess you could say, in the city.“Prostate cancer doesn’t take a rest.
It’s still there. The pandemic doesn’t affect it at all. One in seven Canadian men are going get prostate cancer. It could be your brother, your father, your uncle, your best friend… it could be you.”Last year, said Johner, the event raised.