The science of climate change and the effect of anaesthetic gas emissions

Author:

Slingo J. M.1,Slingo M. E.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Meteorological Office Exeter UK

2. Department of Anaesthesia University Hospital Southampton Southampton UK

Abstract

SummaryThe dedication of the international anaesthetic community to reducing the environmental impact of healthcare is important and to be celebrated. When this is underpinned by robust science, it has the potential to make a real difference. However, volatile anaesthetic agents have been widely promoted in the medical literature as damaging to the climate, leading to a drive to remove them from clinical practice. This is based on notional ‘CO2‐equivalent’ values created using the simple emission metric known as the global warming potential. Here, we assert that when proper consideration is given to the science of climate change, volatile anaesthetic gas emissions cannot be simply equated to real carbon dioxide emissions, and that their climate impact is vanishingly small. This paper gives anaesthetists a framework to make informed choices founded on climate science and calls for attention to be refocused on the urgent need to reduce the real carbon dioxide emissions associated with healthcare.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference31 articles.

1. Inhalation anaesthetics and climate change † †This article is accompanied by the Editorial.

2. Health and Care Scotland News.Scotland first to ban planet‐harming anaesthetic gas.2023.https://healthandcare.scot/stories/3403/climate‐crisis‐health‐anaesthetics(accessed 01/08/2023).

3. NHS England.Putting anaesthetic emissions to bed: commitment on desflurane.2023.www.england.nhs.uk/blog/putting‐anaesthetic‐emissions‐to‐bed/(accessed 02/08/2023/).

4. Environmental sustainability in anaesthesia and critical care

5. Climate effect of inhaled anaesthetics

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