Promised hospital scanners $25m over budget and four years late
Labor’s 2022 state election pledge to install specialist scanners at eight Victorian hospitals won’t be completed until the end of the decade.
A Labor election pledge to give eight Victorian hospitals new specialist scanners is $25.7 million over budget and running four years late.
The bungled rollout has prompted calls to prioritise the critical technology for regional and rural areas.
Before the 2022 state election, Labor promised $44 million to purchase new Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scanners across eight hospitals, four of them in regional Victoria.
The devices are capable of scanning cellular changes and can be used to detect cancers, heart disease and other conditions earlier than other machines.
But the latest state budget revealed this program would now cost $69.6 million as a result of unspecified “project cost increases”.
Previous budgets estimated the project would be completed by the end of this month. It is now forecast to be finalised by June 2030.
One scanner has been provided to the Northern Hospital, and Goulburn Valley Health this year received confirmation they would receive funding to have their new scanner up and running by 2027.
But Warrnambool Base Hospital, Ballarat Base Hospital, Sunshine Hospital, Frankston Hospital, Werribee Mercy Hospital and Wangaratta Base Hospital are still waiting.
Warrnambool patients are travelling to Geelong and Melbourne for these scans because of the delay, regional Liberal MPs Roma Britnell and Bev McArthur have warned.
Opposition Leader Jess Wilson said Labor was failing to deliver on its election promise.
“This broken PET scanner promise means poorer health outcomes for Victorians across the state and is yet another real-world consequence of Labor’s decade of financial mismanagement,” she said.
“Only my Liberal and Nationals team has a plan to clean up the books and invest in the essential services Victorians need and deserve – including our healthcare system.”
“The delivery of a number of these machines is aligned with major hospitals upgrades or redevelopments, some of which are still in construction.”
Australian Medical Association Victoria president Dr Simon Judkins said diagnostic machines were important for any growing community and vital in regional and rural Victoria.
Judkins said the state government should consider prioritising scanners in these areas, focusing on metropolitan services after the regions were covered.
“We seem to be filling up metro areas with new tech, and regional rural areas seem to be a second, he said.
“This is about equity and access for regional rural areas, and again we seem to be playing second fiddle.”
PET scanner funding announced for Goulburn Valley Health in May included $7.1
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