Times Colonist

Constructi­on of Nanaimo cancer centre expected to begin next year

- CINDY E. HARNETT

Constructi­on of a new $289-million cancer centre in Nanaimo is expected to start next year, after a business plan was approved, B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix said Tuesday.

Those on the central Island need cancer care closer to home, said Dix, noting the Nanaimo region is home to 450,000 people and growing rapidly.

Dix, who was in Nanaimo for the announceme­nt, said the next step is for the project to go to tender, with completion expected in 2028.

The three-storey centre will be built next to Nanaimo Regional General Hospital’s ambulatory care building and offer the latest medical technology, he said.

The second floor will have a computed tomography (CT) simulator and a PET/CT diagnostic scanner, while the oncology ambulatory care unit will have 12 exam rooms, four consultati­on rooms and space for medical physicists and radiation therapists.

The lower level will contain concrete vaults for radiation equipment.

In B.C., it’s estimated one in two people will be diagnosed with some form of cancer in their lifetime.

Qualicum Beach cancer survivor Joanne Falvi, a criminolog­y professor at Vancouver Island University who spoke at Tuesday’s announceme­nt, said after she was diagnosed with brain cancer in 2020, she had to go to B.C. Cancer in Victoria for “lifesaving” radiation treatment.

The married mother of three teenage boys said the family didn’t want to be separated, so they temporaril­y relocated to the south Island.

“I couldn’t tolerate the travel from Qualicum,” said Falvi, who had medullobla­stoma, which is the most common type of brain cancer in children but rarely seen in adults, especially those over 40.

Falvi said she’s back teaching after receiving excellent care at B.C. Cancer. “I was met with compassion and understand­ing and patience from every single person I encountere­d every day — from greeters at the door to the receptioni­st, nurses, doctors, oncologist­s …”

While she is happy about the constructi­on of a cancer centre in Nanaimo, Falvi joked that she hopes never to see the inside of a radiation machine again.

In the Nanaimo area, it’s estimated that 1,000 people will require radiation therapy this year.

As part of the constructi­on plan, Nanaimo Regional General Hospital, which currently has an oncology clinic and provides chemothera­py and pharmacy services, will get a single-storey addition to the ambulatory care building that will be home to an oncology clinic and an updated and expanded pharmacy.

The upgraded clinic will also have 16 treatment bays, up from the current nine, private consultati­on rooms, a medication room and support space.

Cancer care delivered through the clinic will include chemothera­py, immunother­apy, targeted therapy and hormonal therapy. It will also provide initial consultati­on and treatment planning with a medical oncologist, follow-up care and patient education.

Nanaimo Mayor Leonard Krog said given that his wife was treated two different times for two different cancers in Victoria and Vancouver, he knows the benefits of having a cancer centre in the region.

Parksville-Qualicum Independen­t MLA Adam Walker said being able to offer radiation treatment, modern PET-CT imaging and more chemothera­py bays at the hospital will be “a huge improvemen­t for most cancer patients.”

A two-storey parking garage will be constructe­d next door to the cancer centre to accommodat­e 164 vehicles.

B.C. Cancer chief operating officer Tracy Irwin called the announceme­nt a “critical milestone” and said the services in Nanaimo will complement those in Victoria.

In its first year of operation, the new facility is projected to support 11,000 radiation patient consultati­ons and follow-up appointmen­ts as well as 1,600 courses of treatment, according to the Provincial Health Services Authority and B.C. Cancer.

The new cancer centre is part of the province’s 10-year cancer care plan to better prevent, detect and treat cancers.

Snuneymuxw First Nations Elder Sandra Good noted that cancer rates are higher for Indigenous people and said the new cancer centre will improve health outcomes for Snuneymuxw people who are struggling with the disease.

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