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"O.R. GOES GREEN": a first step toward reducing our carbon footprint in the operating room and hospital.

Authors :
Leone, Nicola
Scozzari, Gitana
Olandese, Francesco
Horeman, Tim
Passera, Roberto
Arezzo, Alberto
Morino, Mario
Source :
Updates in Surgery; Sep2024, Vol. 76 Issue 5, p2019-2029, 11p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Hospitals in Europe produce approximately 6 million tons of medical waste annually, about one-third of this originating in operating rooms. Most of it is solid waste, which can be recycled if bodily fluids do not contaminate it. Only 2–3% of hospital waste must be disposed of as infectious waste, and this is much lower than the 50–70% of garbage in the biohazard waste stream. In June 2021, at the main operating room of the Department of General Surgery of the University of Turin, we began a separate collection program for materials consisting of plastic, paper, TNT (material not contaminated by bodily fluids), and biohazardous waste. We calculated the number of boxes and the weight of special waste disposed produced every month in one operating room for 18 months. The monthly number of Sanibox and the monthly weight of biohazardous waste decreased during the observation period. The reduction trend was not constant but showed variations during the 18 months. Direct proportionality between number of low-complexity procedures and production of biohazardous waste was found (p = 0.050). We observed an optimization in the collection and filling of plastic, paper and TNT boxes separated and sent for recycling. One of the barriers to recycling hospital waste, and surgical waste in particular, is the failure to separate infectious waste from clean waste. A careful separate collection of waste in the operating room is the first step in reducing environmental pollution and management costs for the disposal of hospital waste. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2038131X
Volume :
76
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Updates in Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180106760
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13304-024-01793-8