Why annual physicals add years—and quality—to men’s lives
Men tend to visit the doctor less often than women, yet they carry a higher burden of preventable illness and shorter life expectancy. The annual physical is a simple, powerful counterweight: it’s where small course corrections today prevent major detours tomorrow. A yearly check-in builds a relationship with a clinician who knows your baseline, notices change early and helps you act before problems escalate.
Think of it as maintenance for your most valuable asset—your health. You’ll leave with clarity on your risks, a plan to lower them, and a roadmap for the next year that aligns with your goals for energy, performance, and longevity.
What happens at an annual physical: Vitals, labs, and honest conversations
A good annual exam is more than a quick blood pressure check. Expect:
Vitals and measurements
Blood pressure and heart rate
Weight, BMI, and ideally waist circumference (a strong marker of metabolic risk)
Oxygen saturation; sometimes vision or hearing screening
Targeted physical exam
Heart, lungs, abdomen
Skin, feet (if diabetes risk), hernias, and genitourinary exam as indicated
Labs (tailored to age and risk)
Lipid panel (cholesterol)
Blood sugar screening (fasting glucose or A1c), especially if overweight/obese or age 35+
Kidney (creatinine/eGFR) and, if needed, urine albumin—especially with hypertension/diabetes
Liver enzymes if at risk for metabolic liver disease or heavy alcohol use
Thyroid, vitamin D, B12, and the Omega-3 Index
Infectious disease tests (HIV, hepatitis B and C, STIs) based on age and risk
Preventive updates
Vaccinations (flu, COVID, Tdap, shingles, pneumococcal, hepatitis B, and others as appropriate)
Cancer screenings and scheduling
Conversations that matter
Sleep quality and snoring (sleep apnea risk)
Mood, stress, and anxiety
Sexual function, libido, erectile health
Alcohol, nicotine, and other substances
Nutrition, activity, and weight goals
Family history updates (heart disease, colon and prostate cancer, diabetes)
What you won’t get routinely: “one-size-fits-all” tests like yearly chest X-rays, ECGs, hormone panels, or whole-body scans without a specific reason. The best care is personalized and evidence based.
Silent threats, big payoffs: Early detection for heart disease, diabetes, and cancer
High blood pressure: Often symptomless but a leading cause of heart attack, stroke, kidney disease, and cognitive decline. Treating it early dramatically reduces risk.
Elevated cholesterol: Years of high LDL quietly build plaque. Identifying your 10-year and lifetime cardiovascular risk guides lifestyle and, when needed, medications that prevent events.
Prediabetes and diabetes: Small changes in A1c today predict big outcomes tomorrow. Early action—weight management, exercise, nutrition—can reverse prediabetes and prevent complications.
Cancer: Colorectal, skin, and prostate cancers can be caught early—when treatment is simpler and survival far better. Lung cancer screening saves lives in eligible current and former smokers.
These aren’t scare tactics—they’re opportunities. Preventive care turns “too late” into “just in time.”
The men’s screening schedule by decade: 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s+
Screening needs vary; use this as a conversation starter with your clinician.
20s
Blood pressure at least annually; weight and waist circumference
Baseline cholesterol in your 20s; repeat if high or risk changes
HIV once for everyone; STI testing if sexually active and at risk
Vaccines: Tdap (then Td/Tdap every 10 years), flu yearly, COVID updates; hepatitis B series recommended for most adults who haven’t had it; HPV catch-up through age 26
Mental health, sleep, and substance use screening
Testicular awareness (no routine screening exam, but know what’s normal for you)
30s
Continue BP, weight, waist checks; reassess cholesterol periodically based on risk
Diabetes screening if overweight/obese or with risk factors (family history, high BP, dyslipidemia)
Eye and dental checkups; address snoring/daytime sleepiness
Family planning, fertility, and sexual health conversations
40s
Full cardiovascular risk assessment; cholesterol and blood sugar checks (A1c or fasting glucose)
Begin colorectal cancer screening at 45 (earlier if strong family history)
Discuss prostate cancer risk—earlier discussions if Black, have a first-degree relative with prostate cancer, or hereditary risk
Skin checks and sun protection counseling
50s
Continue colorectal screening
Prostate cancer: shared decision-making for PSA testing typically ages 55–69; earlier discussion for higher-risk men
Annual low-dose CT lung scan if 50–80 with a 20 pack-year history and currently smoke or quit within the past 15 years
Shingles vaccine (two doses, starting at 50)
Revisit cardiovascular risk; optimize blood pressure, lipids, and diabetes prevention/treatment
60s and beyond
Colorectal screening typically continues through 75 (individualize thereafter)
Prostate screening is generally not recommended after 70; discuss based on health status
Pneumococcal vaccination at 65 (earlier for some conditions)
One-time abdominal aortic aneurysm ultrasound for men 65–75 who have ever smoked
Keep up lung cancer screening if you still meet criteria
Mobility, falls, cognition, hearing, vision, and medications review become increasingly important
5. Don’t skip these: Mental health, sleep, sexual health, and substance use checks
Mental health: Brief tools like PHQ-2/9 and GAD-7 identify depression and anxiety early. Treatment improves energy, relationships, and physical health.
Sleep: Snoring, witnessed apneas, morning headaches, or daytime sleepiness suggest sleep apnea—a major driver of high blood pressure, diabetes, and accidents.
Sexual health: Erectile dysfunction can be an early sign of cardiovascular disease. Bring it up. Discuss libido, fertility goals, STI risk, and contraception.
Substance use: Honest conversations about alcohol, nicotine (including vapes), cannabis, and other drugs lead to risk reduction and, when needed, treatment. For alcohol, less is better; if you choose to drink, aim to stay within low-risk limits and take regular alcohol-free days.
6. Prep like a pro: How to get the most from your visit
Bring:
A list of all medications and supplements (with doses)
Home blood pressure readings, wearable or fitness data trends (steps, sleep), and any recent labs
Your vaccination record
A concise family history (heart attack or stroke before 55 in men/65 in women; colon or prostate cancer; diabetes)
Know your goals and questions:
What’s my 10-year and lifetime heart risk—and how can I lower it?
Are my weight and waist on track? What’s a realistic plan?
Which screenings and vaccines am I due for this year?
Are my symptoms (fatigue, low mood, snoring, erections, heartburn, joint pain) connected to bigger risks?
Logistics:
Ask if fasting is needed for labs
Use your patient portal to fill pre-visit questionnaires
Bring readings or photos (e.g., rashes, home BP, snoring audio) to make the visit efficient
From results to routine: Vaccines, lifestyle upgrades, and follow-up tracking
Vaccines to keep current:
Influenza annually; COVID per current guidance
Tdap once, then Td/Tdap booster every 10 years
Hepatitis B series for most adults who haven’t completed it (through age 59 routinely; 60+ based on risk/preferences)
Shingles (recombinant) at 50+
Pneumococcal at 65 (or earlier if certain medical conditions)
Others based on risk (hepatitis A, meningococcal, travel vaccines)
Lifestyle foundations with big returns:
Movement: At least 150 minutes/week moderate activity or 75 minutes vigorous, plus 2+ days/week strength training; build in daily walking and mobility
Nutrition: Emphasize plants, lean proteins, healthy fats; limit ultra-processed foods, added sugar, and excess alcohol; aim for a sustainable plan, not perfection.
Ask for an Omega-3 Index Test to be sure you are hitting the target intake of the healthiest fats, the Omega-3s EPA and DHA. Do the test at home if your doctor doesn’t make it available.
Ask for a vitamin D test, 25OHD to be sure you are hitting the mark on vitamin D, which supports your heart, mood, bones, muscles and immune health.
Sleep: Target 7–9 hours; treat sleep apnea if present
Tobacco/nicotine: Quitting is the single most powerful health upgrade; ask about medications, counseling, and community support
Stress: Micro-practices—breath work, brief walks, social connection—go a long way
Close the loop:
Review your results with your clinician; understand what’s normal, borderline, and needs action
Track 3–5 metrics quarterly (e.g., BP, waist, resting heart rate, A1c, LDL)
Use reminders to schedule follow-ups and screenings on time
If you start a new medication or lifestyle change, set a date to reassess its impact
Conclusion: Overcoming barriers and making the annual physical a life-long habit
Common roadblocks—time, cost, worry about bad news, or not knowing what to ask—are real. So are the benefits of showing up. Preventive care meets you where you are, trims risk in ways you can feel (better sleep, mood, stamina), and protects you from the health surprises that derail careers and families.
Practical tips to make it stick:
Book your physical the same month every year (birthday, season change, or after a major holiday)
Use your patient portal to check due screenings and vaccines
If you’re nervous, bring a short list of questions and a partner or friend
If access is an issue, ask about early/late appointments, community clinics, or telehealth for parts of the visit
The annual physical isn’t about perfection—it’s about momentum. One visit, once a year, can add healthy years to your life. Schedule it. Prepare a little. Be honest. Then use the plan you create to live the way you want, longer.