Links

Modernized urological health information page for links with improved navigation, readability, and internal linking.

Prescription-only medication guidance Updated internal linking Modern responsive design
Inflam image

Links

find out more information

The Urological Health Center provides these links as a convenience to our patients and website visitors. Please note that linked sites may have information that is subject to copyright and trademark protection and the Urological Health Center does not take responsibility or guarantee the scientific validity of the information provided on these sites.

GENERAL MEDICINE

Web MD
www.webmd.com

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
www.cdc.gov

Medicare
www.medicare.gov

GENERAL UROLOGY

American Foundation for Urologic Disease
www.afud.org

Urology Channel
www.urologychannel.com

American Urology Association
www.urologyhealth.org

CANCER - GENERAL

National Cancer Institute
www.cancernet.nci.nih.gov

American Cancer Society
www.cancer.org

BPH or ENLARGE PROSTATE
BENIGN HYPERPLASIC PROSTATE

Prostate Health
www.prostatehealth.com

INCONTINENCE

National Association for Continence
www.nafc.org

Medtronic Incontinence Therapy
www.medtronic.com/patients/bladder/l

KIDNEY

National Kidney Cancer Association
www.curekidneycancer.org/

National Kidney Foundation
www.kidney.org

MALE INFERTILITY

Resolve: The National Infertility Association
www.resolve.org

PROSTATE ENLARGED

US TOO International, Inc.
www.ustoo.com

U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM)
www.nlm.nih.gov

Dept. of Health and Human Services
www.os.dhhs.gov

National Institute of Health
www.nih.gov

INTERSTITIAL CYSTITIS

National Kidney & Urological Diseases

Interstitial Cystitis Association
www.ichelp.com

Interstitial Cystitis Network
www.ic-network.com

IMPOTENCE

Impotence Resource Center, Osbon Foundation
www.impotence.org

How to Use Medical Resources Responsibly

A links or resources page should not function as a random collection of destinations. It should explain how patients can use educational materials responsibly, how to distinguish broad information from individualized medical advice, and how to move from reading into appropriate clinical action. For urology patients, that often means using educational resources to prepare better questions for a physician rather than to self-diagnose without context. This kind of page can support both user trust and search quality when it is written as a real guidance resource instead of a thin list.