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Published on line by MyCityRadio, March/001
-ray imaging in 3D efficient and safe
With the unveiling today of a state of the art $3.8 million diagnostic system at Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre (VHHSC), doctors at BC’s largest hospital and the UBC Hospital will be able to literally ‘look inside’ their patients before they operate. Instead of searching for tumours and fractures on flat, old-fashioned X-ray images, doctors will able to rotate, magnify and view the problem on flat, digital screens showing four different views of the same image simultaneously. This is the first system of its kind in Western Canada, and the first to transmit digital X-ray data between two hospital sites. Dr. Nestor Muller, Head, Department of Radiology, VHHSC, said the advanced digital system has benefits for patients, doctors and X-ray technicians because it allows the images to be transmitted digitally to all operating rooms or wherever they are needed in the hospital. “With standard film-based X-rays, there is only one copy, and if you want to obtain a consulting opinion, you have to either bring the doctor to the X-ray or the X-ray to the doctor. This inevitably leads to delays, especially with complex abnormalities requiring assessment by several specialists. For example, a radiologist would have to scrub up and go into an operating room in order to consult with surgeons looking at an X-ray during an operation,” he said. Dave Purdie, section head of Angiography at VHHSC said: “It will be great to work with this new system. No more surgeons screaming for their X-rays, no delays, and no health concerns for the technicians, either.”
The system still in use today in most hospital is based on 50 year old technology which hasn’t changed much since its invention. Storage and retrieval of the more than 1million images is just one problem. The system is also dangerous to the health of X-ray technicians. UBC Hospital was forced to move its brand-new X-ray developing machine to another building because workers handling the film were exposed to glutaraldahyde, an extremely toxic chemical used in the developing process and which, according to studies conducted by WCB, is not safe at any level of exposure. 6 workers at UBC developed chronic illnesses as a result of this exposure. With this new digital technology, this problem has essentially been solved.
The system operates on fibre-optic cables. The change-over from the old to the new system is expected to take about three months, but the fibre-optic cables won’t all be laid until the end of the year, according to William Walls, VP Finance of 360 Networks, the company building the fibre-optic network. Along with Ledcor, one of Vancouver’s established construction companies, 360 Networks are donating the funds to pay for this project. Asked what drove his company to be so generous, Walls said that his company is just stepping in Ledcor’s footsteps, who have led the way in ‘giving back to the community’, as he put it. Pressed, he admitted that it might also be good publicity for his publicly traded company. Concerns over patient confidentiality have been addressed by the use of access codes, which are only available to the people actually working on the system. This is much more secure than having a room full of X-ray images, said Dr. Muller.
©2001 Monika Ullmann
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Published by MyCityRadio, November/2000
Dog Poo Stays Put
The good news is that CUPE Local 1004, the outside workers union, has been told by the Labour Relations Board that garbage collection and leaf removal are now essential services. So 100 CUPE workers have been put on the job as of today. It’s the first sign that the position of the union is crumbling in the face of public pressure and internal dissent. An informed source at a community centre said that the union is deeply divided, since the Parks Board employees have never had the four hour work week. The informant said that the strike was supposed to be about wages and working conditions, but it soon became clear that getting back the four day work week was at the heart of the dispute, leaving the Parks Board members to wonder why they were on strike at all. In addition, the last strike vote squeaked by at 51 to 49 against. Given this situation, it seems strange that the city did not sweeten their offer by a signing bonus.
The bad news is the doggy poo suspended in white plastic bags from the metal posts that used to hold trash containers. It will stay. All along Spanish Banks and Jericho beach, the trees are shedding their leaves, but the doggy poo ‘trees’ are growing and adding new bags every day. It’s a strange sight, proving that Vancouver dog owners are a responsible bunch, who are careful about dog poo issues. The poo trees may be bizarre, but they aren’t dangerous. Dr. John Blatherwick, the city’s Health Officer said that while he doesn’t really approve of dog poo preserved in plastic, in the grand scheme of things, there is no danger of fecal coliform contamination. "The count goes up after heavy rainstorms, but then subsides again, and since there is no one swimming in the ocean now, there is no danger," he said. Nonetheless, our newly decorated beaches will stay that way until the strike has been resolved. The civic workers’ strike is now into its 6th week.
©2001 Monika Ullmann
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