B.C. Health Minister says investment in nuclear medicine will expand cancer care
VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government is spending $32 million in advancement of nuclear medicine, to operate imaging equipment for cancer diagnosis and to expand research.
The announcement comes just two years after a worldwide shortage of isotopes used in medical imaging machines that detect and monitor cancers.
Health Minister Adrian Dix says construction is underway in Vancouver for a $21-million cyclotron and radiopharmacy laboratory to increase the production of radioactive isotopes, used in equipment that conducts PET and CT scans.
Dix says the the equipment is a “critical tool” in fighting cancer and will help to ensure all patients in B.C. have “timely access” to the care they need.