The long wait to end the misery miles for Herefordshire cancer patients needing live-saving radiotherapy treatment at Cheltenham was officially over this week, as health bosses decided to set up two new high-tech centres – one each at Hereford and Worcester.
One satellite unit in each of the cities should be up and running by the end of 2012, with an estimated cost of £6 million.
Simon Hairsnape, chairman of the Three Counties Cancer Network and a former chief executive at Herefordshire Primary Care Trust, said: “This is the first development of its type anywhere in the UK and although it’s taken some time it’s worth remembering that three or four years ago the money would have to be spent in extra facilities at Cheltenham.
“The delay gave us time to consider satellite units and allowed this to happen. It would have had about a one in four chance of success four years ago.”
But Cheltenham has not been left out of the picture, where the Network has agreed plans to install another linear accelerator next summer.
Then, depending on how quickly the NHS Trusts responsible for the hospitals at Hereford and Worcester can provide staff and other facilities, the new units should be up and running by 2012.
Although the new Hereford centre will provide thousands of treatment sessions a year for the majority of patients who need a number over a set period of time, about 30 percent will still have to travel to Cheltenham for the most specialist facilities. But the average journey time for the remaining patients should be cut by half.









