Department of General Surgery, McMaster University, Ontario, CA, USA.
Department of Surgery, Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Surg Endosc. 2024 Oct;38(10):5483-5504. doi: 10.1007/s00464-024-11141-x. Epub 2024 Aug 22.
Surgical care in the operating room (OR) contributes one-third of the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in healthcare. The European Association of Endoscopic Surgery (EAES) and the Society of American Gastrointestinal and Endoscopic Surgeons (SAGES) initiated a joint Task Force to promote sustainability within minimally invasive gastrointestinal surgery.
A scoping review was conducted by searching MEDLINE via Ovid, Embase via Elsevier, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Scopus on August 25th, 2023 to identify articles reporting on the impact of gastrointestinal surgical care on the environment. The objectives were to establish the terminology, outcome measures, and scope associated with sustainable surgical practice. Quantitative data were summarized using descriptive statistics.
We screened 22,439 articles to identify 85 articles relevant to anesthesia, general surgical practice, and gastrointestinal surgery. There were 58/85 (68.2%) cohort studies and 12/85 (14.1%) Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) studies. The most commonly measured outcomes were kilograms of carbon dioxide equivalents (kg COeq), cost of resource consumption in US dollars or euros, surgical waste in kg, water consumption in liters, and energy consumption in kilowatt-hours. Surgical waste production and the use of anesthetic gases were among the largest contributors to the climate impact of surgical practice. Educational initiatives to educate surgical staff on the climate impact of surgery, recycling programs, and strategies to restrict the use of noxious anesthetic gases had the highest impact in reducing the carbon footprint of surgical care. Establishing green teams with multidisciplinary champions is an effective strategy to initiate a sustainability program in gastrointestinal surgery.
This review establishes standard terminology and outcome measures used to define the environmental footprint of surgical practices. Impactful initiatives to achieve sustainability in surgical practice will require education and multidisciplinary collaborations among key stakeholders including surgeons, researchers, operating room staff, hospital managers, industry partners, and policymakers.
手术室(OR)的外科护理占医疗保健领域温室气体(GHG)排放量的三分之一。欧洲内镜外科学会(EAES)和美国胃肠内镜外科学会(SAGES)联合发起了一个特别工作组,旨在促进微创胃肠外科的可持续性。
我们通过 Ovid 下的 MEDLINE、Elsevier 下的 Embase、Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库和 Scopus 于 2023 年 8 月 25 日进行了范围综述,以确定报告胃肠外科护理对环境影响的文章。目的是确定与可持续外科实践相关的术语、结果衡量标准和范围。使用描述性统计对定量数据进行总结。
我们筛选了 22439 篇文章,确定了 85 篇与麻醉、普通外科实践和胃肠外科相关的文章。其中有 58/85(68.2%)的队列研究和 12/85(14.1%)的生命周期评估(LCA)研究。最常测量的结果是二氧化碳当量公斤数(kg COeq)、以美元或欧元为单位的资源消耗成本、以公斤为单位的手术废物、以升为单位的耗水量和以千瓦小时为单位的能耗。手术废物的产生和麻醉气体的使用是手术实践对气候影响的最大贡献者之一。教育外科人员了解手术对气候的影响、回收计划以及限制使用有害麻醉气体的策略,是减少外科护理碳足迹的最有效措施。成立由多学科拥护者组成的绿色团队是在胃肠外科中启动可持续性计划的有效策略。
本综述确定了用于定义手术实践环境足迹的标准术语和结果衡量标准。实现外科实践可持续性的有效措施将需要教育和包括外科医生、研究人员、手术室工作人员、医院管理人员、行业合作伙伴和政策制定者在内的主要利益相关者之间的多学科合作。