Uncertainties and opportunities in delivering environmentally sustainable surgery: the surgeons' view

Author:

Ledda V.1ORCID,George C.2,Glasbey J.1,Labib P.1,Li E.1,Lu A.3,Kudrna L.4,Nepogodiev D.1,Picciochi M.1,Williams I.5,Bhangu A.1

Affiliation:

1. NIHR Programme Grant for Environmentally Sustainable Surgery Institute of Applied Health Research, University of Birmingham UK

2. Department of Anaesthesia Christian Medical College and Hospital Ludhiana India

3. Department of Anaesthesia, North West School of Anaesthesia Manchester UK

4. Institute of Applied Health Research University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

5. School of Social Policy University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

Abstract

SummarySurgery is a carbon‐heavy activity and creates a high volume of waste. Surgical teams around the world want to deliver more environmentally sustainable surgery but are unsure what to do and how to create change. There are many interventions available, but resources and time are limited. Capital investment into healthcare and engagement of senior management are challenging. However, frontline teams can change behaviours and drive wider change. Patients have a voice here too, as they would like to ensure their surgery does not harm their local community but are concerned about the effects on them when changes are made. Environmentally sustainable surgery is at the start of its journey. Surgeons need to rapidly upskill their generic knowledge base, identify which measures they can implement locally and take part in national research programmes. Surgical teams in the NHS have the chance to create a world‐leading programme that can bring change to hospitals around the world. This article provides an overview of how surgeons see the surgical team being involved in environmentally sustainable surgery.

Funder

Programme Grants for Applied Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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