Middle East > Israel > MRIs to be in all public hospitals by 2018

Israel: MRIs to be in all public hospitals by 2018

2016/11/02

The Finance Ministry had long opposed putting limitations on MRI scanner purchases by hospitals at their own expense.

Mobile magnetic resonance instruments (MRIs) will be able to shuttle between medical institutions around the country to increase the accessibility to their medical scans, the Knesset Labor, Social Welfare and Health Committee decided on Monday.

Contrary to the completed, there will be no time limitations requiring the vans to be located in specific places. The new rules are relevant to medical facilities that do not have permanent MRIs on the premises.

The committee as well approved an MRI, a computerized tomography (CT) and a positron-emission tomography (PET)-CT scanner for Assuta Hospital’s branch in Ashdod, a public hospital built by the private Assuta that will offer private medical service (SHARAP) for 25% of its medical activities.

But the committee decided to limit the all of time the regulations on scanners would be in result. “This is a strange and even unethical request,” said committee chairman MK Eli Alalouf. A simple way should have been found to make it possible for new scanners to be installed. I don’t understand why the Treasury has to be involved. Those who need these significant services should receive them quickly and easily,” he said.

At the same time as questioned by Alalouf, Rami Avishar of the legal department of the Health Ministry said the ministry does not approve MRIs in private hospitals, because it initial wants all public hospitals to purchase one at least. Avishar said that this will occur by 2018, and that there will again be 46 MRIs around the country.

Avishar’s colleague in the ministry said that each year next 2018, an additional hospital MRI scanner will be given a license, and that private hospitals will be able to purchase them.

The Finance Ministry had long opposed putting limitations on MRI scanner purchases by hospitals at their own expense, because it claimed their existence encourages them to sometimes carry out unnecessary procedures and raise the national health budget.

Ariel University chancellor and former finance minister Yigal Cohen Orgad called on the committee not to approve the regulations until the medical center it set up receives a license for an MRI scanner that, he maintained, has by presently been approved by ministries.

Alalouf and Likud MK Nurit Koren called on the Health and Finance Ministries to transaction with the problem instantly and said he would speak to the relevant ministers to push the approval ahead. He added that he would not delay implementation of the regulations that his committee approved because they are urgently needed by the public.

Related Articles
  • Netanyahu to pioneer new diplomatic grounds in Latin America

    2017/09/13 Defying doomsayers concerned about Israel losing diplomatic clout, Benjamin Netanyahu is headed to Bogota, Argentina, and Mexico -- part other Latin American nations. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is scheduled to depart for Latin America and the US on Sunday evening, marking the fifth time in some 15 months he will embark on ground-breaking trips to nations at no time before visited by a sitting Israeli prime minister.
  • Foreign investment in Israel up 7%

    2017/09/12 320 multinational companies operate in Israel with 30 new companies starting operations in 2016, the Foreign Investments Authority reports. Investments in Israel by foreign companies totaled $12.6 billion in 2016, 7% additional than in 2015, according to the Ministry of Economy and Industry Industrial Cooperation and Foreign Investments Authority. The figures show that 320 multinational companies operate in Israel, and the pace at which such companies are starting to do business in Israel has tripled from 10 a decade ago to 30 in 2016. The Foreign Investments Authority as well reported that almost 10% of all employees in the business sector work at multinationals doing business in Israel. The average fee at these companies is 88% higher than the average fee in local companies and 14% higher than the average fee in local companies doing similar business.
  • Israel's foreign currency reserves rise to record $111b

    2017/09/12 The Bank of Israel did not make any foreign exchange purchases in August as the shekel weakened. Israel’s foreign exchange reserves stood at a record $111.020 billion, at the end of August 2017, an increase of $910 million from their level at the end of July, the Bank of Israel reports. The reserves represent 33.3% of GDP.
  • Finance Ministry: Housing market slower in July

    2017/09/12 According to the chief economist, there were 16% fewer deals than in June and 9% fewer than in July 2016. The downtrend in residential real estate deals is continuing. Central Bureau of Statistics figures published yesterday showed a fall in the number of new housing units sold by contractors, and Ministry of Finance chief economist Yoel Naveh has published new figures today showing a further drop in deals in the sector.
  • Netanyahu’s Historic Latin American Tour to Highlight Israeli Tech Sector

    2017/09/10 Latin America is “hungry for Israeli technology,” a senior Foreign Ministry official said Tuesday ahead of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s historic visit to the region next week. Deputy Director General at the Foreign Ministry’s Latin America and Caribbean Division, Modi Ephraim, said the visit will have historic significance, as it will be the initial by a sitting Israeli prime minister.