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Patients forced to wait two years for MRI scan

By Isabel Oakeshott, Evening Standard Health Correspondent Last updated at 00:00am on 16.04.04

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Patients are being told to wait up to two years for potentially life-saving health checks, it is revealed today.

An Evening Standard investigation has exposed a massive backlog in the number of people waiting for MRI scans.

Many patients have to wait weeks just to join the waiting list, meaning real waits can approach two years.

It means some with serious conditions, such as brain tumours, may not be diagnosed until too late. Doctors today warned lives could be at risk.

Tens of thousands of patients a year need magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. The machines scan soft body tissue and can help identify conditions such as cancer, multiple sclerosis and arthritis.

But hospitals say the £1 million machines often lie idle due to lack of staff. The scale of the backlog emerged after King's College Hospital said its average wait for "non-urgent" referrals was 18 months. A survey of NHS trusts in London revealed most expect patients to wait about six months. NHS budget rises mean many hospitals have invested in scanners, but thousands of radiographers are needed.

Professor Richard Wise of Imperial College London, who frequently refers patients for MRI scans, said: "I saw a patient last week who had waited nine months. They were pretty hacked off. It is much more difficult to practise good medicine with delays of this sort."

GPs cannot send patients for MRI scans - patients must first see a specialist. Waiting lists for outpatient appointments with specialists have fallen fast, but more than 160,000 people still wait more than three months.

Professor Wise said: " If someone has a brain tumour, and they have to wait months and months for a scan, they are dead."


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Hy everybody
As a student at LCC in London, I am working on a project to examine the central issues and problems that relate to the current patient journey from GP surgery to MRI scan encounter and results. I also need to identify the involvement of different stakeholders (medical and non medical people).
The aim is to provide insight and opportunities for developing a user-centered patient experience for the GPMRI scanner.
At the moment I am collecting data, so any help from anyone will be great!
Thanks in advance

- Iolanda Spataro, London, UK, 03/02/2010 16:41
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Medical tourism has become a patent chance to get an MRI scan short term: why not order an MRI abroad? The costs in Germany are much less than in the UK.

- Dr. Stefan Büttner, Ettlingen, Germany, 07/11/2006 17:49
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