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The Crisafulli Government is delivering health services when you need them with new diagnostic imaging technology for 11 locations across the State. 

The new technology is part of a $276 million investment and delivers on a key election commitment, helping heal Labor’s Health Crisis. 

The six new MRI machines and nine CT scanners will be installed at 11 health facilities as part of the program, taking pressure on existing facilities to help deliver healthcare when Queenslanders need them:  

  • Redland Hospital (MRI)
  • Eight Mile Plains Satellite Health Centre (MRI and CT)
  • Brighton Health Campus (MRI and CT)
  • Southport Health Precinct (MRI and CT)
  • Cairns South Health Facility (MRI and CT)
  • Hervey Bay Hospital (MRI)
  • Ayr Hospital (CT)
  • Beaudesert Hospital (CT)
  • Charleville Hospital (CT)
  • Dalby Hospital (CT)
  • Gatton Hospital (CT) 

The new MRI machines represent an almost 20% increase in MRI capacity in Queensland’s public hospitals and health centres, while nine new CT scanners will boost capacity by more than 10%. 

Queensland Health’s 31 current MRI machines perform more than 123,000 scans across the State annually, including more than 42,000 in the greater Brisbane area. 

A decade of decline under Labor left the State’s health system on life support, with ambulance ramping and elective surgery waitlists skyrocketing year on year. 

The investment is part of the Crisafulli Government’s fully-funded Hospital Rescue Plan, delivering the largest investment in hospital infrastructure in Queensland’s history.  

Premier David Crisafulli said the Government was delivering the fresh start Queenslanders voted for, as promised. 

We are delivering easier access to health services so Queenslanders have the care they need, when they need it most. These new CT and MRI machines will bolster our rural and regional health services and free up more hospital beds across the State.  

While we are seeing elective surgery down and important progress on the Hospital Rescue Plan, there is much more to be done to restore health services when you need them, and we remain committed to delivering the fresh start we promised.