Affiliation:
1. North Bristol NHS Trust Bristol UK
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundThe provision of healthcare itself contributes to the global health crisis of the climate emergency. As critical care is a carbon hotspot within hospital medicine, healthcare professionals must take collaborative action to mitigate the environmental impact of the sector.AimsThe purpose of the project was to engage the critical care multidisciplinary team with sustainability efforts, through involvement in a recycling Quality Improvement Project (QIP). The central QIP aimed to increase the recycling rates of single‐use plastic enteral feed bottles in the intensive care unit (ICU) over a 31‐day period.Study DesignA recycling ‘challenge month’ was launched, and staff opinion was surveyed before and after this intervention.ResultsThe QIP demonstrated an increase in feed bottle recycling by 53.2%, representing a carbon‐saving effect of up to 6.02 kg CO2e for the intervention month. Following the central QIP, all survey respondents felt encouraged to consider their ICU's environmental impact.ConclusionsSimple successful QIPs can act as a springboard to engage the staff body with sustainability initiatives and ignite wider conversation and consideration of the climate emergency in daily practice.Relevance for Clinical PracticeEffective recycling constitutes only one element of responsible environmental stewardship, but authors discuss that it is an effective focus for QIPs. To maximize impact and success within critical care, nursing involvement in leading and participation is essential.
Reference28 articles.
1. World Health Organization.Climate change and health. World Health Organization. 2021. Accessed July 12 2023.https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/climate-change-and-health
2. Healthcare Without Harm.Health care's climate footprint climate‐smart health care series green paper number one. 2019. Accessed July 12 2023.https://noharm-global.org/sites/default/files/documents-files/5961/HealthCaresClimateFootprint_092319.pdf