I work in radiology, if you saw the price of the equipment you might understand the rates D:
Well, I work in radiology and I've just been doing some work looking at the feasibility of getting an extra MRI where I work. So I do know the costs (at least where I am), indeed I posted a breakdown of typical costs earlier in the thread.
Simply put, a simple MRI study like a generic brain scan on a standard general purpose MRI scanner, in an efficiently run unit should achieve a cost price of around $300-500. (Obviously, more complex scans, such as fMRI, or large area coverage - e.g. whole spine need more time, and so have a correspondingly higher cost).
A lot depends on how much the equipment cost (e.g. whether it was top-of-the-range general purpose, or a less expensive scanner optimised for a more limited range of tasks) and how busy it is (MRIs have large fixed costs and large capital costs - keeping them busier amortises this cost over more cases. So in Europe, government hospitals tend to run their MRIs for 70-90 hours per week - i.e. they'll offer appointment times from 6 am to 8 pm Monday to Friday + half days on Sat/Sun).
A unit where the scanners work shorter hours (e.g. 35 hour weeks), or which have a high ratio of admin staff to technical staff (e.g. in a small clinic with only 1 scanner), will not be able to achieve that sort of price. Additionally, any defaults on payment, will also mean that this price cannot be achieved.
Similarly, a unit which is required to do specialist work, will naturally require more capital equipment. Typical types of additional equipment that might be needed are:
- contrast injection pump - $80k (explanatory note - most MRI contrast injections can be given by hand. Some highly specialised scans require a precisely timed injection during scanning, or require that the contrast be injected at a rate that cannot be achieved by hand pressure alone)
- EKG monitor - $50k
- fMRI audio/visual equipment - $10k (video projector, control PC, analysis software licensing, rear projection screen on non-magnetic frame, non-magnetic headphones - this last one isn't easy)