Actionable avenues for dermatologists to reduce their environmental impact.

Q3 Medicine
Genevieve S Silva, Jeromy W Gotschall, Misha Rosenbach
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Climate change poses an increasing threat to human health, with well-documented impacts on dermatologic conditions. However, the U.S. healthcare sector is paradoxically a significant contributor to climate change-worsening greenhouse gas emissions. To address this negative externality, calls to action to decarbonize healthcare delivery have spurred research and initiatives around improving the environmental sustainability of medicine. Published sustainability recommendations for dermatologic practices have addressed themes such as renewable energy, single-use disposable materials, regulated medical waste, and clinician advocacy. Our current commentary provides an analysis of the potential of existing recommendations and outlines additional, novel, and actionable interventions. We highlight recently released decarbonization resources and regulatory changes. We emphasize the importance of reassessing procedure kits, minimizing medication waste, and implementing green procurement policies. We also address nuances in promoting environmentally-conscious transit, maximizing the efficient use of technology, supporting alternatives to single-use items, leveraging resources for patient education, assessing appropriate use of carbon credits, and bolstering community climate resilience.

皮肤科医生减少对环境影响的可行途径。
气候变化对人类健康构成越来越大的威胁,对皮肤病的影响有据可查。然而,矛盾的是,美国医疗保健部门是导致气候变化恶化的温室气体排放的重要贡献者。为了解决这一负面外部性,呼吁采取行动,使医疗保健服务脱碳,这刺激了围绕改善医学环境可持续性的研究和倡议。已发表的皮肤科实践可持续性建议涉及可再生能源、一次性使用材料、受管制的医疗废物和临床医生宣传等主题。我们目前的评论分析了现有建议的潜力,并概述了额外的、新颖的和可操作的干预措施。我们重点介绍了最近释放的脱碳资源和监管变化。我们强调重新评估程序包、减少药物浪费和实施绿色采购政策的重要性。我们还在促进环保运输、最大限度地提高技术效率、支持一次性物品的替代品、利用资源进行患者教育、评估碳信用额的合理使用以及增强社区气候适应能力等方面解决了细微差别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Dermatology online journal
Dermatology online journal Medicine-Dermatology
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
200
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: An open-access, refereed publication intended to meet reference and education needs of the international dermatology community since 1995. Dermatology Online Journal is supported by the Department of Dermatology UC Davis, and by the Northern California Veterans Administration.
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