Healing patient, harming planet? A drive towards sustainable surgery: review of waste production and recyclability of surgical instrument packaging.

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 SURGERY Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-02-16 DOI:10.1308/rcsann.2023.0045
Y K Lee, A Hariri, R Ghedia, T Tikka, D Kim
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Abstract

Introduction: Healthcare contributes more than 1% of all domestic waste in the United Kingdom (UK), with operating theatre waste alone accounting for approximately 50% of all hospital waste. In November 2022, the UK Surgical Royal Colleges issued an Intercollegiate Climate Emergency Declaration and called for urgent action. We review waste production and the recyclability of surgical instrument packaging used in a common ear, nose and throat procedure (thyroidectomy) and suggest strategies to make this surgery more sustainable,. These strategies can be generalised to other surgeries.

Methods: We prospectively audited packaging waste from 20 thyroidectomies performed at the Royal Marsden Hospital in the UK between July and December 2022. All packaging was weighed, categorised and analysed after the operation.

Results: On average, each thyroidectomy produced packaging waste comprising 183g (34%) of plain paper/cardboard, 167g (31%) of soft plastic film, 142g (26%) of laminated paper, 37g (7%) of hard plastic and 11g (2%) of metal foil. Of all the packaging collected, only one item had a recycling label. When extrapolated to the 7,851 thyroidectomies performed in the National Health Service during the fiscal year 2021/2022, the estimated total weight of packaging waste would be 4.2 tonnes, of which only 31.4kg would be indicated as recyclable. When converted to an estimated carbon footprint, total carbon emissions would be 1,048kg CO2e, equivalent to three round trips from London to Edinburgh in a petrol car.

Conclusion: This audit demonstrates the different categories and vast amount of packaging waste from a common operation. Manufacturers should place clear recyclability labels on packaging, and switch to recyclable materials and a digital information booklet where possible. Local waste audit and analysis can be simple first steps towards making surgery more sustainable.

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医治病人,危害地球?推动可持续外科手术:审查手术器械包装的废物产生和可回收性。
导言:在英国,医疗废物占所有生活废物的 1%以上,仅手术室废物就占医院废物总量的 50%左右。2022 年 11 月,英国皇家外科学院发布了《学院间气候紧急宣言》,呼吁采取紧急行动。我们回顾了一种常见的耳鼻喉手术(甲状腺切除术)中使用的手术器械包装产生的废物和可回收性,并提出了使这种手术更具可持续性的策略。这些策略可推广到其他手术中:我们对 2022 年 7 月至 12 月期间在英国皇家马斯登医院进行的 20 例甲状腺切除术的包装废弃物进行了前瞻性审核。手术后对所有包装进行称重、分类和分析:平均每例甲状腺切除术产生的包装废物包括183克(34%)普通纸/纸板、167克(31%)软塑料薄膜、142克(26%)复合纸、37克(7%)硬塑料和11克(2%)金属箔。在收集到的所有包装中,只有一件有回收标签。根据 2021/2022 财年全国医疗服务机构进行的 7851 例甲状腺切除术推算,估计包装废物的总重量为 4.2 吨,其中只有 31.4 千克标明可回收。换算成估计碳足迹,碳排放总量为 1,048 千克二氧化碳当量,相当于一辆汽油车从伦敦到爱丁堡往返三次:这次审核展示了一个普通操作过程中产生的不同类别和大量的包装废弃物。制造商应在包装上贴上清晰的可回收标签,并尽可能改用可回收材料和数字信息手册。地方废物审计和分析是使外科手术更具可持续性的简单第一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
316
期刊介绍: The Annals of The Royal College of Surgeons of England is the official scholarly research journal of the Royal College of Surgeons and is published eight times a year in January, February, March, April, May, July, September and November. The main aim of the journal is to publish high-quality, peer-reviewed papers that relate to all branches of surgery. The Annals also includes letters and comments, a regular technical section, controversial topics, CORESS feedback and book reviews. The editorial board is composed of experts from all the surgical specialties.
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