实现更可持续麻醉做法的挑战:减少废物的叙述性审查

Erlend J. Skraastad , Ofelia L. Elvir-Lazo , Paul F. White , David Chernobylsky , Ravina Brring , Roya Yumul
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引用次数: 0

摘要

麻醉和手术室废物造成气候变化和环境污染。虽然包括麻醉师和外科医生在内的专业机构已经制定了支持具有环保意识的保健做法的指导方针,但从业人员在医院执行这些规程时面临困难。这篇叙述性的综述探讨了目前关于麻醉和手术室废物对环境影响的文献。我们还讨论了从业者在实施减少麻醉和手术浪费的举措时面临的障碍。通过PubMed、MEDLINE、谷歌Scholar和Cochrane数据库对同行评议的出版物进行文献综述,以确定1980年至2025年发表的相关文章。对最近的麻醉、外科和医学期刊的检索提供了额外的数据。大约2%的城市固体废物是医疗废物,而医疗保健占全球温室气体排放量的5%。科学组织已经明确定义了减少环境影响的指导方针和建议。实施现有建议的障碍包括缺乏回收废物的适当设施、提供者工作量问题、缺乏医院领导、缺乏具体目标和问责措施、教育不足以及对变革的总体抵制。麻醉和手术室固体废物构成严重的全球健康问题,需要集体努力实现可持续性。麻醉和手术室专业人员必须认识到他们促进环境友好做法的责任。医院的领导是建立一个支持性框架的关键。应要求医院和医疗保健系统遵守具体目标和问责措施。有意义的变革需要与广泛的利益相关者合作,包括政治家、患者、医疗行业和科学组织。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Challenges in achieving more sustainable anaesthesia practices: a narrative review of waste reduction
Anaesthesia and operating room waste contribute to climate change and environmental pollution. Although professional bodies involving anaesthesiologists and surgeons have developed guidelines for supporting environmentally conscious health practices, practitioners face difficulties implementing these protocols in hospitals. This narrative review explores the current literature concerning the environmental impact of anaesthesia and operating room waste. We also discuss obstacles practitioners face in implementing initiatives to decrease anaesthetic and surgical waste. A literature review of peer-reviewed publications was conducted across PubMed, MEDLINE, Google Scholar, and Cochrane Databases to identify relevant articles published from 1980 to 2025. A search of recent anaesthesia, surgery, and medicine journals provided additional data. Around 2% of urban solid waste is medical waste, and healthcare accounts for 5% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Scientific organisations have clearly defined guidelines and recommendations to reduce environmental impact. Barriers to implementing existing recommendations include the lack of proper facilities for recycling waste materials, provider workload concerns, lack of hospital leadership, lack of specific targets and accountability measures, insufficient education, and overall resistance to change. Anaesthetic and solid operating room waste pose significant global health concerns, necessitating a collective effort towards sustainability. Anaesthesia and operating room professionals must recognise their responsibility for promoting environmentally friendly practices. Hospital leadership is pivotal to creating a supportive framework. Hospitals and healthcare systems should be required to adhere to specific targets and accountability measures. Meaningful change requires collaboration with a wide range of stakeholders, including politicians, patients, the medical industry, and scientific organisations.
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来源期刊
BJA open
BJA open Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
CiteScore
0.60
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0.00%
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审稿时长
83 days
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