November often signals the start of the festive season in many places, but for men’s health it holds a special significance: Movember. This annual campaign invites men (and those who support them) to pause, reflect and act on several critical health issues that too often go unspoken: prostate cancer, testicular cancer, and mental health (including suicide prevention).
What is Movember?
Beginning in 2003 in Australia, the Movember movement emerged – men growing moustaches during the month of November – to spark conversations and raise funds for men’s health.
Over time it has grown into a global initiative across multiple countries, offering a visible ‘hook’, but more importantly promoting awareness, screening, lifestyle change and mental-health openness.
Why it matters
Men’s health outcomes reveal notable disparities. For example:
- Globally, men tend to die younger than women, often from preventable or treatable conditions.
- In the context of prostate cancer, it is among the most commonly diagnosed cancers in men worldwide.
- For testicular cancer, while less common than many other cancers, it is one of the most frequent cancers among younger men (aged 15-34).
- On the mental-health front, men are less likely to seek help, more likely to hide distress, and suicide remains a significant concern.
In short, raising awareness doesn’t simply mean noting the statistics, but enabling earlier detection, encouraging help-seeking, promoting healthy lifestyle habits, and reducing stigma.
What can individuals and organisations do?
Talk about it
Starting the conversation is key. Whether in the home, workplace or community, making men’s health feel normal to talk about helps break down barriers.
Know the numbers and risk factors
Age, family history, and ethnicity may influence risk in prostate cancer, and younger age groups should be aware of testicular cancer signs.
Screening & self-checks
While guidelines vary by country, checking in with a healthcare provider about prostate health and being familiar with testicular changes can help.
Lifestyle matters
Healthy diet, physical activity, avoiding excessive alcohol and tobacco, managing weight and staying connected socially all support men’s health.
Support mental-health
Encouraging regular check-ins with friends, openness about how one is feeling, and reducing stigma about seeking help are all constructive.
Act locally
In some regions, access to care, cultural attitudes, and health-system strength affect outcomes. Organisations working in Africa, Asia or other developing regions may face greater challenges in awareness, diagnosis and treatment access.
The message for November 2025
During this month of Movember:
- If you’re a man, consider scheduling a health check-up, ask your doctor about prostate health (especially if you have risk factors), and if you notice any changes in your testicles, speak up.
- If you care about a man (friend, partner, father, brother, colleague), initiate a conversation.
- Organisations and workplaces, consider making space for men’s health education, provide information on mental-health support, and encourage inclusive peer networks.
- Communities, consider raising awareness, funding support services, reducing stigma and pushing for improved access to care when needed.
Movember is an important movement to promote conversation, awareness and action for men’s health.
At Pharmalys, we recognise the importance of men’s health and well-being. By raising awareness and encouraging open dialogue, we stand with the global Movember movement in its mission to improve health outcomes for men everywhere.
https://prostatecanceruk.org/about-us/movember
https://thegrovemedicalgroup.nhs.uk/2024/11/04/movember-the-real-face-of-mens-health











