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Less radiation. More clarity. Stronger hope.

You can bring the next generation of CT imaging to McMaster Children’s Hospital

Every once in a while, a revolutionary new technology comes along that can change the future of health care delivery and transform lives. The next generation of CT imaging, Alpha Photon-Counting Computed Tomography (PCCT), is one of those technologies. It delivers up to 80% less radiation, faster scans, less sedation needed, and sharper images for accurate diagnoses.

Imagine a child – nervous, small, brave – about to undergo a scan that will determine the course of their care. Now imagine that scan is quicker, clearer, and gentler than anything available today. That’s the future you can help build.

Make a Difference Today

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Give children the advanced imaging they need to face cancer, heart conditions, and other complex illnesses. McMaster Children’s Hospital depends on CT scans, but as demand continues to grow, the hospital’s current scanner is aging and being pushed to the limit. With your support, next generation CT imaging will be brought to more children, more quickly, with clearer answers, and less radiation exposure throughout their specialist care.

Families gain safer tests, clear results, and greater confidence.

Image of the Alpha PCCT Scanner

Alpha PCCT Scanner

Bennett and his mom Katelyn

For Kids Like Bennett

Eleven days before his sixth birthday, Bennett arrived at McMaster Children’s Hospital with what seemed like flu-like symptoms. A physical exam and diagnostic scans revealed the unsettling truth: a baseball-sized tumour growing from one of his ribs. He was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma, a rare and aggressive bone cancer.

What followed was a journey of extraordinary courage: 14 rounds of chemotherapy, 32 days of radiation, surgery, and countless difficult procedures. Through it all, Bennett faced every challenge with what his parents Scott and Katelyn describe as “relentless natural optimism.”

For children like Bennett, precision and speed in diagnostic imaging aren’t technical details, they are life-changing. The Alpha PCCT Scanner would mean significantly lower radiation exposure for pediatric cancer patients who require repeated scans throughout their treatment, reducing long-term risk of secondary cancers. It would detect lesions earlier, deliver more accurate diagnoses, and in many cases, eliminate the need for general anesthesia during imaging.

Today, Bennett is nine-years-old, in remission and thriving. His story is a reminder of what is at stake in every scan.

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The exterior of McMaster Children's Hospital building in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

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