Phoon Kar May, Afzal Irrum, Sochart David H, Asopa Vipin, Gikas Panagiotis, Kader Deiary
South West London Elective Orthopaedic Centre, Epsom, UK.
Bone Jt Open. 2022 Aug;3(8):628-640. doi: 10.1302/2633-1462.38.BJO-2022-0067.R1.
In the UK, the NHS generates an estimated 25 megatonnes of carbon dioxide equivalents (4% to 5% of the nation's total carbon emissions) and produces over 500,000 tonnes of waste annually. There is limited evidence demonstrating the principles of sustainability and its benefits within orthopaedic surgery. The primary aim of this study was to analyze the environmental impact of orthopaedic surgery and the environmentally sustainable initiatives undertaken to address this. The secondary aim of this study was to describe the barriers to making sustainable changes within orthopaedic surgery.
A literature search was performed according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines through EMBASE, Medline, and PubMed libraries using two domains of terms: "orthopaedic surgery" and "environmental sustainability".
A total of 13 studies were included in the final analysis. All papers studied the environmental impact of orthopaedic surgery in one of three areas: waste management, resource consumption, and carbon emissions. Waste segregation was a prevalent issue and described by nine studies, with up to 74.4% of hazardous waste being generated. Of this, six studies reported recycling waste and up to 43.9% of waste per procedure was recyclable. Large joint arthroplasties generated the highest amount of recyclable waste per procedure. Three studies investigated carbon emissions from intraoperative consumables, sterilization methods, and through the use of telemedicine. One study investigated water wastage and demonstrated that simple changes to practice can reduce water consumption by up to 63%. The two most common barriers to implementing environmentally sustainable changes identified across the studies was a lack of appropriate infrastructure and lack of education and training.
Environmental sustainability in orthopaedic surgery is a growing area with a wide potential for meaningful change. Further research to cumulatively study the carbon footprint of orthopaedic surgery and the wider impact of environmentally sustainable changes is necessary.Cite this article: 2022;3(8):628-640.
在英国,国民医疗服务体系(NHS)估计每年产生2500万吨二氧化碳当量(占全国碳排放总量的4%至5%),并且每年产生超过50万吨的废物。仅有有限的证据表明可持续性原则及其在骨科手术中的益处。本研究的主要目的是分析骨科手术对环境的影响以及为解决此问题而采取的环境可持续举措。本研究的次要目的是描述在骨科手术中进行可持续变革的障碍。
根据系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南,通过EMBASE、Medline和PubMed数据库,使用“骨科手术”和“环境可持续性”这两个术语领域进行文献检索。
最终分析共纳入13项研究。所有论文均在以下三个领域之一研究了骨科手术对环境的影响:废物管理、资源消耗和碳排放。废物分类是一个普遍问题,9项研究对此进行了描述,产生的有害废物高达74.4%。其中,6项研究报告了废物回收情况,每个手术程序产生的废物中高达43.9%是可回收的。大型关节置换术每个手术程序产生的可回收废物量最高。3项研究调查了术中耗材、灭菌方法以及通过使用远程医疗产生的碳排放。1项研究调查了水资源浪费情况,并表明实践中的简单改变可将用水量减少多达63%。在各项研究中确定的实施环境可持续变革的两个最常见障碍是缺乏适当的基础设施以及缺乏教育和培训。
骨科手术中的环境可持续性是一个不断发展的领域,具有进行有意义变革的广泛潜力。有必要进一步开展研究,以累积研究骨科手术的碳足迹以及环境可持续变革的更广泛影响。引用本文:2022;3(8):628 - 640。