A CT scan or computed tomography scan is a medical imaging technique used in radiology to obtain detailed internal images of the body noninvasively for diagnostic purposes.
Members of the Ingham Health Service Community Advisory Network were pleased to meet with local MP Bob Katter when he visited Ingham recently.
Peter Smith, the Chairman of the Ingham Health Service Community Advisory Network, said the group discussed with Mr. Katter the need for the hospital to have on site computed tomography equipment.
“The aged demographic of the shire makes this diagnostic tool an essential,” he said.
“Bob said that he would meet with the federal minister for health this week on the matter.”
Mr Katter said the group told him that patients had to be transported across Ingham to the town’s privately owned CT scanner or to Townsville, which tied up important paramedic resources that would otherwise be responding to other emergencies.
“There can be a lot of trauma and tragedy inflicted on patients having to transport them across town and back for a CT scan, or worse patients have to be transported to Townsville, as is the case in Charters Towers,” Mr Katter.
“I applaud the initiative of Rural Medical Imaging to get a privately owned CT scanner in Ingham, but there’s plenty of room for two here. Plus, the privately owned machine only operates during normal business hours, not 24/7. We need something in the hospitals available all the time.
“Bowen received Federal Government money for a CT scanner before the last election, and Bowen is smaller than Charters Towers and Ingham. So, I will be very concerned if we don’t get a positive response when we meet with the Minister this week.
“I personally was having a massive heart attack and three Doctors x-rayed me and told me there was nothing wrong with me. Well, a CT scanner would have picked that up.”
Mr Katter also met with Charters Towers Councillor Graham Lohmann about the need for a CT scanner in that community.
Graham Lohmann said Charters Towers is in a terrible situation as it does not even have a private practice that has a CT scanner.
“We are desperate for a CT scanner and the problem is only exacerbated by distance and cost,” he said.
“Our hospital is over 100 years old so the CT scanner will have to have its own building as well which will cost approximately $3.5m.”
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