Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the The Scotsman site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Drive to cut heart and cancer deaths boosted by £1.6m scanner



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 26 May 2008
A PIONEERING scanner, capable of capturing images of entire organs in a fraction of a second, is coming to the UK for the first time, it emerged yesterday.
The £1.6 million machine, developed over ten years at a cost of £250 million, will start operating in Edinburgh in January.

It is hoped the scanner will improve the diagnosis and treatment of heart disease, cancer and other conditions, as well as
help researchers hunting for major medical breakthroughs.

The Aquilion One CT scanner, made by Toshiba, is coming to Scotland supported by a £4 million investment by Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS).

In an unusual move, the company will use up to 25 per cent of the scanner's capacity to extend health screening for its staff. The remaining 75 per cent will be split between the Queen's Medical Research Institute (QMRI) and NHS Lothian, on top of the scanning resources already available in the region.

QMRI will be the first institute in the UK – and one of the first in Europe – to receive the new scanner. It will provide 4,000 extra scans for patients every year. The scanner is expected to make a major contribution to Scotland's efforts to cut heart disease and cancer deaths.

Unlike conventional scanners, the Aquilion One can capture an image of the whole organ in just 0.35 seconds, meaning radiation exposure is reduced by 80 per cent compared with a CT scan.

It is also hoped the scanner will reduce the need for invasive procedures on patients, as well as help research on the internal workings of the body. Professor David Newby, director of QMRI's clinical research imaging centre, said the scanner represented a major advance in imaging the human body.

"The scanner will enable the centre to carry out cutting-edge research with the ultimate aim of improving treatment for patients," he said.

Charles Swainson, medical director at NHS Lothian, added: "We are delighted that this partnership will result in such an advanced scanner being available.

"It will allow our clinicians to diagnose life-threatening illnesses within minutes and pave the way for quicker treatment."

The partnership with RBS will see the bank contributing to the running costs for five years.

Allan Watt, group head of brand communication at RBS, said: "As well as supporting the UK's reputation for medical research and bringing additional diagnostic support to Scotland, it will allow RBS to extend its current health screening options to staff."

Nicola Sturgeon, the health secretary, described the arrival of the scanner as "a real coup".

She continued: "This partnership between NHS Lothian and RBS will offer real benefits to patients throughout Scotland who require access to this type of cutting-edge diagnostic service."



The full article contains 464 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 25 May 2008 10:24 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 26/05/2008 02:26:34
Good stuff. So when can the rest of us expect one to be installed in our area?
2

Prester John,

Pots_n_Pans 26/05/2008 07:04:50
#1 I wasn't aware there were wind turbines on Rockall [;-)
3

Prester John,

Pots_n_Pans 26/05/2008 07:13:02
More seriously, I see there are people cribbing, complaining that this creates a two-tier system probably because the RBS staff are getting screening. Good luck to them I say: he who pays the piper calls the tune and RBS is putting up the money - their employees should benefit. Pity their customers (like me) can't be put on the lists too !

Actually it would be a three-tier system because the top tier are those who are totally private, the middle tier are those with some element of health insurance (provided privately or corporately) with the bottom tier comprised of those who rely upon the health service being free at the point of care.

Having endured poor treatment by the NHS recently, I now have some health insurance and wish I'd had it a decade or so ago.
4

The Strategist,

26/05/2008 08:38:52
The irony is that in the 80s if the Royal Bank of Scotland or any other bank had invested in the MRI technology developed by Aberdeen University then this new scanner would probably not have to be imported from Japan but delivered from a factory in Aberdeen!!
5

JT,

26/05/2008 14:05:36
will this become a royalties account benefit?? hope that someone wont die waiting for a scan just because RBS employees are hogging the scanner.
6

Union man,

Dunfermline 26/05/2008 17:55:14
If you are an RBS employee you have a better chance of getting access to this system.

I thought in this country our national medical rights are a given (not like the US) and have nothing to do with any company.

Makes me sick to the core. It's plan wrong as simple as that.

RBS can stick their scanner... or give a genuine donation to the people with no strings or put it in private hands not in the nation's NHS.
7

Macd123,

26/05/2008 18:02:04
#6 you are wrong, there will be no waiting list for anyone
8

,

26/05/2008 19:21:32
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
9

Jamie Bates,

Leith 26/05/2008 19:31:52
This gesture is not in the spirit of the kind of philanthropy that Scotland is famous for. 25% is way too much of a go for them to have on their new piece of kit. That means one in four people that go through that scanner will be RBS workforce. Sounds like RBS is pretty sick to me if they can’t see that this kind of thing is a step too far. If it comes to the crunch I guess they’ll get away with this though, but surely they won’t get a disproportionate amount of NHS staffing time along with an unfair quarter of all the other resources that are used in conjunction with the scanner. That would be like me walking into casualty with my own bandages and asking to be served first. I think they should get to use the scanner more but it should be operated by their own staff.
10

Voldemort,

Edinburgh 26/05/2008 21:50:39
How many Trams can you get for £1.6million ?? Surely this money spent on heath guff is much better spent on Trams ? Maybe there could be a Tramline to the hospital ? Better still, we could put the hospital onto a tramline and it could go round and round visiting everyone !!

So many great ideas and so little time ..... I should have been a Labour or Lib Dem MSP or Councillor ... acht well !
11

Voldemort,

Edinburgh 26/05/2008 22:04:18
Can someone tell me why RBS are getting a hard time on this thread instead of the politicians who have installed so many middle men in the NHS, each a jobsworth in their own right, that prevents ANY of the £100 billion budget they receive reaching front line areas such as these ?

If they got rid of the 90% of the pencil pushers and invested in front line staff and front line hardware then RBS contributions would not be necessary.

Blaming RBS is a bit like blaming the repo man for the financial mess your in .... RBS investment is an effect not a cause ...

The government are experts at pulling up their trousers before they've wiped their backsides then employing 400 consultants on £1000 a day to deal with the trouser soiling problem!! Anything rather than just doing the necessary prior to the pulling up stage ! But then that wouldn't be 'Job Creation' would it !?
12

Publius,

Girvan 26/05/2008 23:36:46
Now we know what an SNP government is all about: priority for bankers. I've sent several posts to these boards pointing to the alliance between SNP and business. Now perhaps someone will believe me!

What an insult to the leagues of friends of many hospitals who have provided all kinds of equipment for use by everyone on the basis only of need. I hope Nicola Sturgeon is ashamed of herself.

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.