Walsh Stephen James, O'Leary Aisling, Bergin Colm, Lee Sadhbh, Varley Áine, Lynch Matthew
School of Pharmacy & Biomolecular Sciences, University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin 2, Ireland.
National Centre for Pharmacoeconomics, James's Hospital, James's St., Dublin 8, Ireland.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Dec 20;24(1):1630. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-12068-8.
The escalating climate crisis poses a significant threat to global public health. The healthcare sector, designed to protect human health is a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions, and thus, a key driver of climate degradation. This paradox endangers both planetary and human health, making the decarbonization of healthcare, including primary care, critical. However, research on primary care's contribution to emissions and strategies for mitigation remains limited.
This scoping review aimed to map how primary care contributes to healthcare's environmental footprint and determine contributing factors. Additionally, it sought to identify existing and innovative strategies to reduce the carbon footprint of primary healthcare.
A comprehensive strategy was developed to systematically search both published databases and grey literature. Key terms were identified and employed in the exploration of relevant databases and internet search engines.
An initial search yielded 246 published articles and 25 grey literature sources. 14 additional articles were included following forward and backward searching of prominent authors and key articles. After screening and full-text review, 39 articles and 12 reports/toolkits were included. The majority of sources were opinion pieces, with limited quantitative, observational, or qualitative studies. Primary care's carbon footprint can be classified into clinical and non-clinical sources, with significant impacts from pharmaceuticals and inhaler propellant gases. Contributing factors include limited knowledge of emission sources, lack of awareness of sustainable practices, low prioritization of sustainability, barriers including ethical concerns and over-medicalization. Identified strategies to reduce emissions include decarbonization of patient care, increasing education and awareness, implementing non-clinical decarbonization efforts, and conducting more research to support sustainable initiatives. Developing metrics to track progress and securing policy supports to improve adoption and implementation were also highlighted as critical.
The identification of sources of carbon hotspots in primary care is an essential precursor to enable the development of targeted decarbonization strategies. Decarbonizing primary care requires a multifaceted approach that addresses the underlying factors driving unsustainable practices. This would allow healthcare professionals to effectively balance the provision of high-quality patient care, while reducing their environmental impact, ultimately improving both human and planetary health.
不断升级的气候危机对全球公共卫生构成重大威胁。旨在保护人类健康的医疗保健部门是温室气体排放的主要贡献者,因此也是气候恶化的关键驱动因素。这种矛盾危及地球和人类健康,使得包括初级保健在内的医疗保健脱碳至关重要。然而,关于初级保健对排放的贡献以及缓解策略的研究仍然有限。
本范围综述旨在梳理初级保健如何影响医疗保健的环境足迹并确定影响因素。此外,它还试图确定减少初级医疗保健碳足迹的现有和创新策略。
制定了一项综合策略,以系统地搜索已发表的数据库和灰色文献。确定了关键术语并用于探索相关数据库和互联网搜索引擎。
初步搜索产生了246篇已发表文章和25个灰色文献来源。在对知名作者和关键文章进行向前和向后搜索后,又纳入了14篇文章。经过筛选和全文审查,纳入了39篇文章和12份报告/工具包。大多数来源是观点文章,定量、观察性或定性研究有限。初级保健的碳足迹可分为临床和非临床来源,药品和吸入器推进剂气体产生重大影响。影响因素包括对排放源的了解有限、对可持续做法缺乏认识、可持续性的优先级低、包括伦理问题和过度医疗化在内的障碍。确定的减排策略包括患者护理脱碳、加强教育和提高认识、实施非临床脱碳努力以及开展更多研究以支持可持续倡议。制定跟踪进展的指标并获得政策支持以促进采用和实施也被强调为至关重要。
确定初级保健中的碳热点来源是制定有针对性的脱碳策略的重要前提。初级保健脱碳需要采取多方面的方法,解决推动不可持续做法的潜在因素。这将使医疗保健专业人员能够在提供高质量患者护理的同时,有效平衡减少其环境影响,最终改善人类和地球健康。