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Welcome to Salem Health Urology

We are pleased to announce that on Dec. 16, 2024, the providers and staff of Willamette Urology joined Salem Health Hospitals and Clinics as Salem Health Urology.

While the name has changed, the clinic location and phone number have not. The same compassionate providers and staff will continue to deliver care to patients across our region.

You are welcome to contact the Salem Health Urology team at 503-561-7100 if you have any questions or concerns during this transition.


Transition of Willamette Urology billing

Contact Larsen Billing at 801-396-5185 or patientbilling@larsenbilling.com for questions about Willamette Urology bills. Pay online at https://pay.instamed.com/willametteurol.

This only applies to bills for services received before Dec. 16, 2024, or bills with a Willamette Urology logo at the top. Bills after that date, or with a Salem Health logo, are payable to Salem Health.

 







Urology experts

Urology is a surgical specialty that deals with conditions of the urinary system in men and women and the male reproductive system.

Special areas include conditions of the prostate, kidneys, bladder, urethra and male reproductive organs. Click below for more information about diagnosis and treatment for many of the conditions Salem Health Urology physicians evaluate and treat.


Urologic conditions







Our providers

Since 1950, our practice has provided the best in urologic care to the people of the central Willamette Valley and coastal areas. Our providers offer complete diagnosis and treatment of all disorders and diseases of the genitourinary system in both men and women.

More from the You Matter blog

Prostate cancer: Is it OK to "wait and see"?

Mar 22, 2016, 15:13 PM
Make sure you and your doctor BOTH understand your goals, and your plan is based on your underlying health and those goals.
Title : Prostate cancer: Is it OK to "wait and see"?
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doctor discussion senior man
“Men below the age of 65 should usually pursue treatment,” says Michael Kelber, MD, a family medicine physician at Willamette Health Partners.

But for older men, especially those in their 70s and 80s, the slow-growing nature of prostate cancer means the cancer may not become a major problem and they might not need treatment. Most prostate cancers are found in men 65 and older.

“It’s important that doctors give patients the information about their cancer in as open a way as possible and then the patient makes the decision on how to proceed,” Dr. Kelber says.

If you’re 65 or over, or medically too fragile for treatment, your health care provider will likely recommend either active surveillance or watchful waiting. “Those terms are often used interchangeably,” says Nancy Boutin, MD, medical director at Salem Cancer Institute. “But they are different, and it’s important you and your provider have the same understanding.”

With active surveillance, you’ll see your provider regularly, probably every six months, have a regular PSA (prostate specific antigen) blood test, digital rectal exam and repeat biopsies based on your urologist’s assessment. This helps you have a current understanding of the cancer and identify if it’s changing rapidly.

Dr. Boutin says active surveillance is used if you have a potentially curable prostate cancer, you could tolerate treatment in the future, you want to identify the optimum time for treatment, and you’re committed to keeping up with the necessary appointments and tests.

Watchful waiting is useful when you don’t have a curable cancer, or you’re too old or your health is too poor for aggressive cancer treatment. With watchful waiting, you will have fewer tests. “If your goal is to treat the symptoms when they get to be bothersome then your approach can be casual,” Dr. Boutin says.

“The problem seen across the country, and reported in literature, is men who have a curable disease, and have long life expectancy, who go on watchful waiting when they really should have active surveillance,” Dr. Boutin says.

You can use any term, but make sure you and your doctor understand your goals, and your plan is based on your underlying health and those goals. 

Prostate cancer is one of the few cancers where you have the option to make choices on how to respond. “Your health care provider can partner with you to make a decision together,” says Dr. Kelber, “and I think that’s the right thing to do.”

Looking for support?

Check out our Prostate Cancer Support Group. It meets monthly and is run by a prostate cancer survivor and his wife and other volunteers.

Category :
  • Aging and older adults
  • Cancer care
  • Men's Health
  • Urology
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  • article
  • feature
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Location/contact

Salem Health Urology

2973 12th St. SE
Salem, OR 97302
503-561-7100

 

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