Developing the green operating room: exploring barriers and opportunities to reducing operating room waste

Author:

Pillay Ludmilla1,Winkel Kenneth D2,Kariotis Timothy1

Affiliation:

1. University of Melbourne Melbourne VIC

2. Centre for Health Policy University of Melbourne Melbourne VIC

Abstract

Summary The Australian health care system contributes 7% of the national greenhouse gas emission footprint and generates massive waste streams annually. Operating rooms are a particular hotspot, generating at least 20% of the total hospital waste. A systematic search of several global academic databases was conducted in mid‐2022 (articles from 1992 to 2022) for peer‐reviewed research relevant to waste management in the operating rooms. We then used thematic analysis to enumerate and characterise the strategies and barriers to sustainable waste management in the operating room. The waste reduction strategies focused on avoidance of high carbon products; correct waste segregation and reduced overage; reusing, reprocessing, and repurposing devices; and improved recycling. The first barrier identified was a constrained interpretation of the concept of “first do not harm”, ingrained in surgeons’ practices, in prioritising single‐use surgical products. The second barrier was ineffective or insufficient waste education. The third barrier was the immediate cost of implementing waste management compared with the long term realisation of environmental and economic benefits. The last barrier to implementing institutional practice change was the lack of policies and regulations at the local hospital, federal and international levels. We also evaluated the knowledge gaps in current surgical waste research, including lack of benchmarking data and standardised regulations concerning reusable or reprocessed devices, as well as the methods used to promote pro‐sustainability behavioural change.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference78 articles.

1. Education report;Foran P.;ACORN: The Journal of Perioperative Nursing in Australia.,2015

2. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.Hospital resources 2015–16: Australian hospital statistics.2017.https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/hospitals/ahs‐2015‐16‐hospital‐resources/summary(viewed Aug 2022).

3. World Health Organization.Climate change.2023.https://www.who.int/news‐room/fact‐sheets/detail/climate‐change‐and‐health(viewed Aug 2023).

4. Analyses of the recycling potential of medical plastic wastes

5. Greening of Orthopedic Surgery

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