Prostate cancer does not affect all men equally. For Black men in America, the disease carries a weight that goes far beyond a medical diagnosis it reaches into families, reshapes communities and cuts lives short at a rate that demands urgent attention. The numbers are clear and they are hard to sit with: Black men are more than 70% more likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer compared to white men, and they are more than twice as likely to die from it. One in six Black men will face this disease at some point in his lifetime.
Behind every one of those statistics is a father, a brother, an uncle, a mentor someone whose absence leaves a permanent mark. Prostate cancer is not simply a matter of genetic luck. It is shaped by a combination of biology, environment and deep-rooted disparities in how healthcare is accessed and delivered across racial lines. Understanding that complexity is the first step toward changing the outcome.
Get screened before you feel anything is wrong
The single most important thing a Black man can do for his prostate health is to get screened regularly, and to do so without waiting for symptoms to appear. Prostate cancer in its early stages is largely silent. By the time something feels off, the disease may have already progressed. That is why routine screening is not optional it is essential.
Visiting a primary care physician for a prostate-specific antigen, or PSA, blood test is a straightforward process, but it is one that far too many men put off. The reasons vary: fear, distrust of the medical system, cultural stigma around discussing health, or simply the assumption that they are fine because nothing hurts. None of those reasons are worth a life.
Prostate cancer caught early is highly treatable. The survival rate drops significantly when the disease is found at a later stage. Regular screenings tip the odds in your favor, and that alone makes them worth prioritizing.
Start those conversations earlier than you think
For years, standard medical guidance recommended that Black men begin discussing prostate cancer screening around age 45. But updated thinking in the medical community now points to an earlier starting point. Men with a family history of prostate cancer a father, brother or other close male relative who had the disease are encouraged to begin those conversations with their doctor as early as age 40.
Family history is one of the strongest known risk factors for prostate cancer. If the disease has shown up in your family tree, that is not something to file away and forget. It is a reason to be proactive, to get in front of a doctor sooner and to establish a baseline so that any changes can be caught and addressed quickly.
The earlier the conversation begins, the more options are available. Waiting until the mid-50s which remains common narrows the window in which early intervention is most effective.
Ask questions and keep asking them
Walking into a doctor’s office and receiving test results can feel overwhelming, particularly when the healthcare system has not always been a place where Black men feel seen, heard or respected. But active engagement with a healthcare provider is one of the most powerful tools available.
That means asking what a PSA result actually indicates, what the next steps are, what risks exist given personal and family history, and what options are on the table if something concerning is found. It means not leaving an appointment with unanswered questions. And it means returning if something still does not feel right.
Research has consistently shown that when Black men receive equitable access to screening and treatment, the gap in outcomes between them and white men narrows considerably. The disparity is not inevitable it is, in large part, a product of unequal access and systemic barriers that can be challenged one appointment, one conversation and one informed decision at a time.
The path forward starts with showing up for yourself and refusing to treat your health as something that can wait.

