Litcius/Paper detail

Going green: decreasing medical waste in a paediatric intensive care unit in the United States

Zelda J. Ghersin, Michael R. Flaherty, Phoebe H. Yager, Brian Cummings

2020The New Bioethics32 citationsDOI

Abstract

The healthcare industry generates significant waste and carbon emissions that negatively impact the environment. Intensive care units (ICU) are a major contributor to the production of waste, due to patient complexity and needs requiring extensive equipment, cleaning practices and pre-emptive supplies. To quantify the extent of the problem, health care professionals collected all unused medical supplies destined to be discarded over three one-week periods in a paediatric intensive care unit, weighed the items, and created an inventory. This article argues for greener hospital standards and provides a specific example of a project framework to reduce disposable waste with the hope that others can embark on similar initiatives for a more ethical and sustainable future for hospitals. Healthcare facilities must not just meet short-sighted safety standards of the now. In order to be a virtuous organization, one must consider all implications of daily decisions, including disposable supplies and cleaning.

Topics & Concepts

Health careBusinessUnit (ring theory)Medical wasteProduction (economics)Intensive care unitOperations managementMedical emergencyWaste managementMedicineEngineeringIntensive care medicinePsychologyEconomic growthMacroeconomicsMathematics educationEconomicsHealthcare cost, quality, practicesClimate Change and Health ImpactsHealthcare and Environmental Waste Management