Times Colonist

B.C. to spend $11 million for more diagnostic MRI scans

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British Columbia is increasing the number of MRI exams that will be done across the province.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said an additional 37,000 MRIs will be done in the public health-care system by this time next year.

The province said 188,000 of the exams — which use magnets and radio waves to make a detailed picture of specific parts of the body — are slated to be performed this year at hospitals and clinics in the public system.

Dix said $11 million is being made available to add resources and capacity, allowing for the completion of 225,000 MRIs in 2018-19.

That is nearly a 20 per cent increase, Dix said, describing it as a “bold step” toward delivery of an NDP promise to restore health services and cut waiting lists.

Overall wait times for the exams exceed 41 days for half of all patients, with 10 per cent waiting more than 199 days, according to the Health Ministry.

“Wait times are simply too long in B.C., in part due to volumes that are 35 to 40 per cent less than other provinces,” Dix said.

Ministry data shows that by the end of last year, B.C.’s per capita rate for a scan was 37 for every 1,000 of the population, far below the national average of 55.5 per 1,000.

The increased targets will be achieved by operating existing machines longer to accommodat­e more patients and by adding more of them to the public health-care system, the ministry said in a statement.

Centralize­d regional registries will also be created to weed out duplicate referrals and appointmen­ts, prevent wasted operating time and offer patients the earliest appointmen­t available.

Magnetic resonance imaging is one of the tools used to diagnose a number of medical conditions, including abnormalit­ies of the brain, as well as tumours, cysts and soft-tissue injuries, the ministry said.

The government’s announceme­nt marks a shift in its approach, said the B.C. Health Coalition, a network of individual­s and organizati­ons that campaigns for improvemen­ts to public health care.

“For too long B.C. has allowed public MRI wait times to grow while allowing a market for private MRI clinics to flourish,” Edith MacHattie, the coalition’s cochairwom­an, said in a statement.

MacHattie said more money spent to increase the number of MRIs that can be done in the public health system will also help reduce waits for surgery.

“An accurate diagnosis is the first step to ensure patients receive the care they need to get well,” MacHattie said.

“Increasing the province’s ability to provide timely public MRI scans will play an important role in driving down surgical wait times.”

 ??  ?? Dr. Shane Greek, left, and technician Yves Gagnon with the MRI machine at the Royal Jubilee Hospital. The province said that 188,000 MRI exams were slated to be performed this year at hospitals and clinics in the public system. New funding will allow...
Dr. Shane Greek, left, and technician Yves Gagnon with the MRI machine at the Royal Jubilee Hospital. The province said that 188,000 MRI exams were slated to be performed this year at hospitals and clinics in the public system. New funding will allow...

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