Environmental impact of pediatric ENT surgery: A STROBE analysis.

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q2 OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY
M Martin, S Ayraud-Thevenot, X Dufour, J-P Lebreton, J Guihenneuc, F Carsuzaa
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Increasing emissions of greenhouse gases contribute to climate change. The healthcare sector, and particularly the operating room, is a significant emitter of greenhouse gases. In head-and-neck surgery, pediatric procedures are very common, but few studies have assessed their ecological impact. Our objective was to quantify the carbon footprint of common pediatric head-and-neck surgeries (tonsillectomy, adenoidectomy, and transtympanic tube placement).

Methods: An eco-epidemiological study was conducted in December 2022 in a tertiary hospital center. The carbon footprint of 10 pediatric head-and-neck surgeries (tonsillectomies, adenoidectomies, transtympanic tube placements) was calculated, as the sum of carbon dioxide (CO2eq) emissions generated by patient and medical staff transport, waste production, energy consumption in operating rooms, manufacturing and transport of disposable and reusable medical devices (MDs), medication production, and sterilization of reusable MDs.

Results: The carbon footprint of 1 pediatric head-and-neck surgery was 57.86kgCO2eq. Disposable MDs were the most polluting item with 30.82kgCO2eq (53.3%). Patient transport accounted for 27.4%, medication for 12.6% and reusable MDs for 2.9%.

Conclusions: Pediatric head-and-neck surgeries generate a significant quantity of CO2, mostly due to the production and delivery of disposable MDs. These observations could serve as a starting point for ecological actions consistent with an environmentally sustainable and climate-resilient health system.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
28.00%
发文量
97
审稿时长
12 days
期刊介绍: European Annals of Oto-rhino-laryngology, Head and Neck diseases heir of one of the oldest otorhinolaryngology journals in Europe is the official organ of the French Society of Otorhinolaryngology (SFORL) and the the International Francophone Society of Otorhinolaryngology (SIFORL). Today six annual issues provide original peer reviewed clinical and research articles, epidemiological studies, new methodological clinical approaches and review articles giving most up-to-date insights in all areas of otology, laryngology rhinology, head and neck surgery. The European Annals also publish the SFORL guidelines and recommendations.The journal is a unique two-armed publication: the European Annals (ANORL) is an English language well referenced online journal (e-only) whereas the Annales Françaises d’ORL (AFORL), mail-order paper and online edition in French language are aimed at the French-speaking community. French language teams must submit their articles in French to the AFORL site. Federating journal in its field, the European Annals has an Editorial board of experts with international reputation that allow to make an important contribution to communication on new research data and clinical practice by publishing high-quality articles.
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