An Audit of Recyclable and Contaminated Waste From Invasive Cardiac Procedures

Haitham Amin , Nooraldaem Yousif , Thomas F. Lüscher
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Abstract

Background

Waste generation from health care facilities is significant. Quantifying and minimizing waste from cardiac catheterization laboratories (CCL) and cardiac operating theaters (COT) has received little attention in an effort to lessen its environmental impact. The purpose of this study was to assess the quantity of contaminated and recyclable waste resulting from invasive cardiac procedures.

Methods

To assess the potential impact of recycling, quantify the amount of waste that ends up in landfills, and determine how much contaminated material needs to be managed, we audited the amount of hazardous and nonhazardous medical waste produced from CCL and COT in our cardiac center.

Results

Every year, our cardiac center performs 350 cardiac surgeries and 2900 interventional cases. We estimated that annually 11,000 kg of recyclable waste and 30,000 kg of contaminated waste are generated. If this is extrapolated to all the CCL and COT globally, the anticipated annual waste production from invasive cardiac procedures is 150 million kg (150,000 metric tons).

Conclusions

Cardiologists and cardiac surgeons must embrace sustainability as a critical need and join the effort to prevent global warming. One tiny action that each of us can take to improve the environment is to try to decrease waste while encouraging recycling.
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对侵入性心脏手术产生的可回收废物和污染废物的审计
背景医疗设施产生的废物数量巨大。对心导管室(CCL)和心脏手术室(COT)产生的废物进行量化和最小化处理,以减少其对环境的影响,却很少受到关注。为了评估回收利用的潜在影响、量化最终进入垃圾填埋场的废物数量并确定有多少污染材料需要管理,我们对心脏中心的心导管室和心脏手术室产生的有害和无害医疗废物数量进行了审计。我们估计每年产生 11,000 公斤可回收废物和 30,000 公斤污染废物。如果将这一数字推算到全球所有的 CCL 和 COT,那么每年心脏介入手术产生的废物预计将达到 1.5 亿公斤(15 万公吨)。我们每个人都可以采取改善环境的一个微小行动,那就是努力减少废物,同时鼓励循环利用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
48 days
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Table of contents Retraction notice to "E-39 | Association Between Sodium-Glucose Co-Transporter 2 Inhibitor Use and 30-Day Outcomes after Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement: A Retrospective Matched Cohort Analysis" [JSCAI 3 (2024) 101800] Cover SCAI Expert Consensus Statement on the Management of Patients With STEMI Referred for Primary PCI Optimizing Primary PCI Care for STEMI Patients: Key Messages From the SCAI Expert Consensus Statement
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