• About
  • Get Jnews
  • Contcat Us
Thursday, April 16, 2026
hardcopyng.com
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Health
  • National
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Health
  • National
No Result
View All Result
Morning News
No Result
View All Result
Home Health

When Silence Hurts: Understanding Penectomy Through the Stories We Rarely Tell

Hardcopy by Hardcopy
January 21, 2026
in Health
0
When Silence Hurts: Understanding Penectomy Through the Stories We Rarely Tell
0
SHARES
30
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Adurodija Ebenezer

READ ALSO

No Content Available

By Adurodija Ebenezer

Most people never expect to hear the word penectomy in their lifetime. It’s a term that tends to live in medical textbooks, whispered conversations, or the quiet corners of hospital corridors. Yet behind that unfamiliar word are real people, real families, and real decisions that can shape the course of someone’s life.

As a public health educator, I’ve learned that the hardest topics are often the ones we most need to talk about. Penectomy is one of them — not because it is common, but because when it becomes necessary, the stakes are incredibly high.

This is the story of what happens when knowledge, compassion, and timely action come together.

A Diagnosis That Changes Everything

Imagine a man in his late fifties — let’s call him Tunde. He’s a father, a husband, a neighbor who never misses a community meeting. For months he notices a sore on his penis that doesn’t heal. He’s embarrassed, unsure, and hopes it will go away on its own. It doesn’t.

By the time he gathers the courage to see a doctor, the diagnosis is clear: penile cancer. It’s rare, but when it appears, it demands attention. His medical team explains that the cancer has spread deeper than expected. Less invasive treatments won’t be enough.

The word penectomy enters the room.

For Tunde, and for many others in similar situations, the shock is immediate. But so is the reality: this surgery may be the only way to stop the cancer from advancing.

What Penectomy Really Means

A penectomy is the surgical removal of part or all of the penis. It is not performed lightly. It is reserved for situations where a person’s health — and often their life — is at risk.

There are two main forms:

Partial Penectomy

When only part of the penis is affected, surgeons remove the diseased portion and preserve as much healthy tissue as possible. Many individuals can still urinate standing and may retain some sexual function.

Total Penectomy

When cancer or injury is too extensive, the entire penis must be removed. Surgeons create a new opening, called a perineal urethrostomy, to allow safe urination.

These procedures are not about loss — they are about survival. They are about giving someone the chance to keep living, healing, and rebuilding.

The Human Side of Recovery

After surgery, the medical journey continues, but so does the emotional one.

Patients like Tunde often face questions about identity, masculinity, and the future. This is where holistic care becomes essential. Recovery involves:

  • Wound care and follow‑up visits
  • Rehabilitation to adapt to changes in urination
  • Emotional support, which can be just as important as physical healing
  • Reconstructive options, such as phalloplasty, for those who choose it

Modern healthcare teams understand that healing is not just about the body. It’s about dignity, confidence, and the reassurance that life can still be full and meaningful.

Why Public Awareness Matters

Penile cancer is rare, but delayed treatment can be dangerous. Many people hesitate to seek help because of embarrassment or fear. That hesitation can cost precious time.

When communities understand what penectomy is — and why it is sometimes necessary — several things happen:

  • Stigma decreases
  • People seek medical evaluation earlier
  • Families know how to support loved ones
  • Conversations about men’s health become more open and compassionate

Knowledge doesn’t just inform. It protects.

A Path Forward

Tunde’s story doesn’t end with his surgery. It continues with follow‑up care, support from his family, and a renewed commitment to his health. He speaks openly now, not because the experience was easy, but because he knows silence helps no one.

Penectomy may be a difficult topic, but it is also a reminder of the power of early detection, the importance of honest conversations, and the strength people find when they are supported with empathy and accurate information.

As public health educators, our role is simple: bring light to the places where fear and misunderstanding thrive. When we do, we give people the tools they need to face even the hardest diagnoses with clarity and courage.

 

Related Posts

No Content Available
Next Post
2027 and the Architecture of Nigeria’s Political Heists: A Systemic Critique

2027 and the Architecture of Nigeria’s Political Heists: A Systemic Critique

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POPULAR NEWS

Prophetic Word for Nigeria – 2026

Prophetic Word for Nigeria – 2026

January 4, 2026
THE COST OF CUTTING CORNERS

THE COST OF CUTTING CORNERS

February 17, 2026
Christianity and the Polygamy Question: A Faith Negotiating Its Past and Its Future

Christianity and the Polygamy Question: A Faith Negotiating Its Past and Its Future

February 2, 2026
MOTHERING SUNDAY IN THE SHADOW OF VIOLENCE: THE UNTOLD STORIES OF WOMEN SURVIVING GBV

MOTHERING SUNDAY IN THE SHADOW OF VIOLENCE: THE UNTOLD STORIES OF WOMEN SURVIVING GBV

March 15, 2026
2027 and the Architecture of Nigeria’s Political Heists: A Systemic Critique

2027 and the Architecture of Nigeria’s Political Heists: A Systemic Critique

January 21, 2026

EDITOR'S PICK

Truth, Duty, and the Lesson of Sapphira: What an Ancient Story Reveals About Modern Marriages

Truth, Duty, and the Lesson of Sapphira: What an Ancient Story Reveals About Modern Marriages

March 22, 2026
When Mothers Leave Home: Omugwo, Marriage, and the Husband Who Reached His Quiet Breaking Point

When Mothers Leave Home: Omugwo, Marriage, and the Husband Who Reached His Quiet Breaking Point

February 28, 2026
ODU President Applauds Kogi State Government’s Swift Action on Ogori/Magongo Security Problems

ODU President Applauds Kogi State Government’s Swift Action on Ogori/Magongo Security Problems

February 13, 2026
At Nigeria’s Quiet Center, Kogi’s Hidden Tourism Frontier Waits to Be Claimed

At Nigeria’s Quiet Center, Kogi’s Hidden Tourism Frontier Waits to Be Claimed

January 22, 2026

About

We bring you the best Premium WordPress Themes that perfect for news, magazine, personal blog, etc. Check our landing page for details.

Follow us

Categories

  • Feature
  • Health
  • News
  • Politics
  • Uncategorized

Recent Posts

  • Female Power: Beyond the Myth of the “Weaker Sex”
  • GOOD FRIDAY: SACRIFICE, HOPE, AND THE CALL TO BETTER LEADERSHIP
  • THE HIGH COST OF STAYING APOLITICAL
  • Truth, Duty, and the Lesson of Sapphira: What an Ancient Story Reveals About Modern Marriages

Newsletter

  • Buy JNews
  • Landing Page
  • Documentation
  • Support Forum

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Health
  • National

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.