PEI

Matching funds to help P.E.I. hospitals fund digital mammography, nutrition tech

Some Island patients will soon have an easier time ordering food in the hospital, and others will be getting updated mammography testing, thanks in part to new funding from the province.

Foundations making plans for promised funds from provincial government

The Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Charlottetown plans to roll out a new digital food ordering system to replace the current one using paper menus. (Nicole Williams/CBC)

Some Island patients will soon have an easier time ordering food in the hospital, and others will be getting updated mammography testing.

That's the plan for money promised recently by Premier Dennis King, who said the province will match up to $500,000 in donations made this year to both the Prince County Hospital Foundation in Summerside and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Foundation in Charlottetown.

Both organizations say the extra funds mean more support for patients.

Heather Matheson, managing director for the PCH Foundation, told CBC's Island Morning on Thursday that her team was "pretty surprised" to hear King announce the news at a recent event.

"We didn't expect that at all. I must say, hearing that announcement certainly made a big impact on our fundraising goal for the year," Matheson said.

The PCH's goal for 2021 is just shy of $1.8 million.

Exterior view of Prince County Hospital.
The PCH Foundation will use a large portion of its new funding from the province to replace a mammography device. (CBC)

Both foundations will be purchasing digital mammography devices this year, and the provincial funding will help make a big dent in their $600,000 price tag.

Matheson said the provincial funding news had "really good timing" since their current mammography equipment was put in place in 2009 and has reached the end of its life.

End to paper menus at QEH

Besides new mammography equipment, Tracey Comeau of the QEH Foundation said the funding will help them digitize their food services.

People are still filling out paper menus a day before their meal is delivered, which Comeau said has been the same practice since the hospital opened in 1982.

Tracey Comeau of the QEH Foundation says the Charlottetown hospital's funding boost will be split between the digital food system and a new mammography device. (Laura Meader/CBC)

A new digital system means patients can choose what they want to eat more quickly, using a digital tablet or device brought to them by a volunteer or staff member. It should also reduce food waste by about 9 per cent, Comeau added.

"It really brings the nutritionist back to the bedside for education on how people can take these good food choices home with them," she said.

The QEH will act as an "incubator" for the digital system, which will eventually roll out to all other health facilities across the Island.

Comeau said the QEH Foundation will split its portion of matching provincial funds.

The nutrition services project will cost about $250,000 and the remaining funds will go toward two new mammography machines at a cost of over $1.1 million.

More from CBC P.E.I. 

With files from Island Morning