Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Academic Department of Gastroenterology, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, UK.
United European Gastroenterol J. 2024 Nov;12(9):1292-1305. doi: 10.1002/ueg2.12698. Epub 2024 Oct 25.
Climate change, described by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2021 as 'the single biggest health threat facing humanity', causes extreme weather, disrupts food supplies, and increases the prevalence of diseases, thereby affecting human health, medical practice, and healthcare stability. Greener Gastroenterology is an important movement that has the potential to make a real difference in reducing the impact of the delivery of healthcare, on the environment. The WHO defines an environmentally sustainable health system as one which would improve, maintain or restore health while minimizing negative environmental impacts. Gastroenterologists encounter the impacts of climate change in daily patient care. Alterations in the gut microbiome and dietary habits, air pollution, heat waves, and the distribution of infectious diseases result in changed disease patterns affecting gastrointestinal and hepatic health, with particularly severe impacts on vulnerable groups such as children, adolescents, and the elderly. Additionally, women are disproportionally affected, since climate change can exacerbate gender inequalities. Paradoxically, while healthcare aims to improve health, the sector is responsible for 4.4% of global carbon emissions. Endoscopy is a significant waste producer in healthcare, being the third highest generator with 3.09 kg of waste per day per bed, contributing to the carbon footprint of the GI sector. Solutions to the climate crisis can offer significant health co-benefits. Steps to reduce our carbon footprint include fostering a Planetary Health Diet and implementing measures for greener healthcare, such as telemedicine, digitalization, education, and research on sustainable healthcare practices. Adhering to the principles of 'reduce, reuse, recycle' is crucial. Reducing unnecessary procedures, which constitute a significant portion of endoscopies, can significantly decrease the carbon footprint and enhance sustainability. This position paper by the United European Gastroenterology aims to raise awareness and outline key principles that the GI workforce can adopt to tackle the climate crisis together.
气候变化被世界卫生组织(WHO)在 2021 年描述为“人类面临的最大单一健康威胁”,它导致极端天气、扰乱食物供应并增加疾病的流行率,从而影响人类健康、医疗实践和医疗保健的稳定性。更绿色的胃肠病学是一项重要的运动,它有可能在减少医疗保健提供对环境的影响方面产生真正的影响。世界卫生组织将环境可持续的卫生系统定义为能够在最大限度地减少对环境的负面影响的同时提高、维持或恢复健康的系统。胃肠病学家在日常患者护理中遇到气候变化的影响。肠道微生物组和饮食习惯的改变、空气污染、热浪以及传染病的分布导致影响胃肠道和肝脏健康的疾病模式发生变化,对儿童、青少年和老年人等弱势群体产生特别严重的影响。此外,女性受到的影响不成比例,因为气候变化会加剧性别不平等。矛盾的是,尽管医疗保健旨在改善健康,但该部门占全球碳排放量的 4.4%。内窥镜检查是医疗保健中产生大量废物的一个主要环节,是第三大废物产生者,每天每张病床产生 3.09 公斤废物,这对 GI 部门的碳足迹有贡献。解决气候危机可以带来显著的健康协同效益。减少碳足迹的步骤包括培养行星健康饮食和实施更绿色的医疗保健措施,如远程医疗、数字化、教育和可持续医疗实践的研究。坚持“减少、再利用、再循环”的原则至关重要。减少构成内窥镜检查重要部分的不必要程序,可以显著减少碳足迹并提高可持续性。这份由联合欧洲胃肠病学会发布的立场文件旨在提高认识并概述 GI 工作人员可以采用的关键原则,以共同应对气候危机。