Radiology department marks 50 years of advancement

A hospital is celebrating the medical advancements made by its radiology department as it marks 50 years since it first opened.
More than 90% of patients who attend the Royal United Hospital (RUH) in Bath, Somerset, will visit the radiology department for X-rays, CT scans or MRIs.
Radiographer Kathy Thomas has worked there since it opened and has witnessed "significant changes" unfold in modern medicine and technology.
Scans have now progressed from black-and-white film to high-resolution 3D digital images, enabling staff to spot small abnormalities and cancerous tumours.
Medical advancements
The department has seven modern MRI and CT scanners as well as X-ray and ultrasound facilities and a PET-CT scanner, used in the detection and diagnosis of cancer and dementia.
But even three decades ago, film negatives were painstakingly analysed by holding them up against light boxes.
"It feels like an awfully long time ago, and things have changed dramatically," said Ms Thomas.

"X-ray films were much more difficult to handle and had to be processed, which sometimes didn't work. Someone's chest X-ray might be lost at the bottom of a tank.
"Those things don't happen now. Technology has made a huge difference, and things are much easier," she explained.

Sarah Bond, operational lead radiographer, says the department sees more than a 1,000 patients a day, operating seven days a week.
"It has grown massively, tripling in services and staff size over the 30 years I've been here," she said.
"A CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis would take 30 minutes to complete. Nowadays, it takes just 30 seconds.
"Radiology at the RUH is really quite special," she added.
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