Abstract
Anaesthesia is associated with the routine use of volatile anaesthetic agents, all of which are potent greenhouse gases in varying degrees. Desflurane, in particular, has a high global warming potential and in recent years, there has been a global movement to reduce or remove its usage entirely from operating theatres. We work in a large tertiary teaching hospital in Singapore with deeply entrenched practices of using desflurane to facilitate high turnover of operating theatre cases. We launched a quality improvement project to (1) reduce the median usage of desflurane by 50% (by volume), and (2) reduce the number of theatre cases administering desflurane by 50% over a period of 6 months.We collected baseline data to determine departmental monthly median usage of desflurane. We then deployed sequential quality improvement methods to educate staff and to eliminate misconceptions, as well as to promote a gradual cultural change.We successfully reduced monthly median desflurane usage from 31.5 L to 12.2 L per month (61.3% reduction) within our targeted time frame. We also achieved a reduction in the number of theatre cases using desflurane by approximately 80%. This translated to significant cost savings of US$195 000 per year and over 840 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalents saved.Healthcare is a resource intensive industry. Anaesthetists are well placed to play an important role in reducing healthcare-related carbon emissions by choosing anaesthetic techniques and resources responsibly. Through multiple Plan-Do-Study-Act cycles and a persistent, multifaceted campaign, we achieved a sustained change in our institution.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Leadership and Management
Reference16 articles.
1. DESFLURANE AND SEVOFLURANE: INHALATION ANAESTHETICS FOR THIS DECADE?
2. Axelrod D , Bell C , Feldman J , et al . Greening the operating room. 2014. Available: https://www.asahq.org/about-asa/governance-and-committees/asa-committees/environmental-sustainability/greening-the-operating-room [Accessed 21 Jul 2022].
3. The carbon footprint of general anaesthetics: a case study in the UK;Hu;Resources, Conservation and Recycling,2021
4. Meta-Analysis of trials comparing postoperative recovery after anesthesia with sevoflurane or desflurane;Macario;Am J Health Syst Pharm,2005
5. A comparative study of desflurane versus sevoflurane in obese patients: effect on recovery profile;Bansal;J Anaesthesiol Clin Pharmacol,2020
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献