I can’t. I just can’t.
From the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
In April 2021, President Biden pledged to drastically reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 50% relative to 2005 levels by 2030. This ambitious agenda will inevitably require significant changes across the breadth of the United States economy, including the health care sector. According to previous studies, the health care industry accounts for roughly 8.5% of total GHG emissions in the United States (the most in the world in per-capita and absolute terms),1,2 and in recent years, the provision of cancer care has increasingly been included in discussions about decarbonization.3,4 We believe that surgical oncologists are a crucial stakeholder community in the implementation of associated priorities for two reasons. First, owing to the prevalence of consumables, heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, volatile anesthetic gases, and sterilization processes, operating rooms (ORs) partially account for 70% of a hospital’s waste and are three to six times more carbon-intensive than the hospital as a whole, according to a 2017 life cycle analysis.5–7 In 2014, the release of hydrofluorocarbon and chlorofluorocarbon anesthetic gases stood at the equivalent of 3 million tons of carbon dioxide, with 80% of emissions from desflurane alone.8,9 Second, carbon-intensive minimally invasive surgical approaches, that is, laparoscopic and robotic-assisted, have become mainstays in the management of several cancers, for example, uterine, oropharyngeal, colorectal, and prostate.10–15 For example, the robotic hysterectomy has been associated with a carbon footprint of 814 KgCO2e, commensurate with a 2,273 mile journey in a gasoline car.16 This is salient because the adoption of robotic-assisted procedures increased eight-fold from 2012 to 201811 and overall minimally invasive surgical activity in the United States is associated with total CO2 emissions of 355,924 tons per year, synonymous with a country-level ranking of 198th among UN member states.17
https://ascopubs.org/doi/full/10.1200/JCO.21.02581
Here is the press release for this “publication”.
Operating rooms are the climate change contributor no one’s talking about
Two surgeons-in-training suggest some sustainable solutions for their energy-intensive discipline.
MICHIGAN MEDICINE – UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
CREDIT: JACOB DWYER/MICHIGAN MEDICINE
In April 2021, during the Leaders Summit on Climate, President Biden announced his goal to drastically reduce the United States’ greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.
Victor Agbafe was watching the address on TV. The University of Michigan Medical School student, who is also studying law at Yale, immediately texted a few mentors, including Michigan Medicine integrated plastic surgery resident Nicholas Berlin, M.D., M.P.H., M.S.
The question that emerged from their messages was a crucial one: What role can the medical community, which accounts for about 8.5% of America’s greenhouse gas emissions, play in these climate change reduction efforts?
A year later, research that Agbafe and Berlin led outlines some answers. Their paper describes how surgery, particularly cancer surgery, contributes to climate change and suggests some solutions to combat the problem, from reducing waste to rethinking how surgical care is delivered.
“In general, these ideas are good for our planet,” Agbafe said. “But also, surgery unfortunately plays a disproportionate role in the carbon output and the waste we produce in medicine.”
Operating rooms are a massive source of greenhouse gas production for hospitals, representing 70% of their waste and generating three to six times as much carbon as the rest of health systems.
Cancer care is an obvious target for greener efforts within surgery, Berlin notes, because it often involves intense levels of care over a short period of time.
Plus, minimally invasive surgeries that require a lot of energy, including robotic-assisted operations, have become common treatments for cancers ranging from colorectal and uterine cancer to head and neck cancer. A robotic-assisted hysterectomy, for example, produces as much carbon as driving more than 2,200 miles in a car — the equivalent of a road trip from Ann Arbor, Mich., to Los Angeles.
“If we can lower our greenhouse gas output, we have a chance to extend the lifespan of our patients and expand access to timely care,” Agbafe said. “And we think it’s really important that the surgical community is proactive at being at that table.”
What to do differently
One of the most feasible changes to make in this space would be around waste reduction, Agbafe said.
This might be as simple as making sure that anything thrown away before or during surgery is properly categorized and labeled since it’s estimated that over 90% of OR waste does not meet the necessary standards for the type of trash it ends up in. (The red waste bags in ORs are intended only for items that have been exposed to bodily fluids and are much more expensive to dispose of than clear disposal bags.)
Hospitals could also consider switching to some reusable or reprocessed devices and surgical gowns since there is no link between reused tools and hospital-acquired infections.
Some of the pair’s other suggestions involve optimizing ORs’ energy use. Agbafe and Berlin point to the American Society of Healthcare Engineering’s recommendations to install energy-efficient lighting, schedule preventive maintenance and minimize air flow into rooms that aren’t being used as easy ways to green the systems.
The surgical supply chain could be more efficient, too, they write. Estimates suggest that 87% of the surgical instruments laid out for an operation are rarely used, so coming up with standardized lists of the necessary tools for surgeries that occur regularly could cut down on cost, waste and the energy needed to sterilize and repackage those instruments.
Moving more manufacturing of surgical supplies closer to hospitals — or choosing to source from suppliers that are locally based — could also reduce the OR’s carbon footprint.
“Given some of the geopolitical events that have been going on right now in Ukraine and with China and the competition there along with the effects of pandemic is creating an increasing emphasis on resiliency within supply chains,” Agbafe said. “So this idea of localizing our operating room supply chains is something that there’s a lot of political energy and momentum within the public to move towards.”
Reimagining care delivery
But perhaps the broadest way the oncology space could cut down on its greenhouse gas emissions is to change how surgical care is delivered, starting with permanently offering telemedicine.
“We think telemedicine is a great opportunity for us to lower the climate impact and improve the quality of care by doing so,” Agbafe said. “During the pandemic, we’ve been using virtual care and if we could make that a routine aspect of cancer care for pre-op and post-op, that’s a way we can reduce the climate impact of delivering care and make it more convenient for patients.”
Reducing low-value care is another way to eliminate carbon-producing activities associated with unnecessary scans, testing and procedures.
This has been a priority for U-M, thanks to the Michigan Program on Value Enhancement — a collaboration of Michigan Medicine and the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy that aims to improve the quality of care at the institution — and a partnership with the similarly oriented Michigan Value Collaborative, also referred to as MVC, a collaborative quality initiative that serves the entire state.
Last year, the two organizations collaborated on a study that highlighted how much routine testing was still done before surgeries despite its low value. Berlin was the first author.
“U-M is considered one of the leading institutions studying low-value care and efforts to limit that type of care,” Berlin said. “But like a lot of other centers, we are really just at the precipice of these initiatives. I would anticipate big changes in the next 10 years.”
From gas to (more sustainable) gas
Some sustainability shifts may come even sooner at Michigan Medicine.
For instance, the Department of Anesthesiology recently launched the Green Anesthesia Initiative, or GAIA for short. Its mission: become more environmentally conscious about the types and rates of anesthesia its providers use, another area Agbafe and Berlin say is ripe for improvement.
“This is a topic of fairly intense discussion right now in the field, and I’ve been thinking about it for a while,” said George Mashour, M.D., Ph.D., the chair of the Department of Anesthesiology and the Robert B. Sweet Professor of Anesthesiology at the University of Michigan Medical School. “Unlike other industries, I don’t think that we require massive disruption in order to make progress because, fortunately, we have options.”
Several inhaled gases regularly used for anesthesia are A-list offenders when it comes to greenhouse gas production. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, is a greenhouse gas, a direct ozone depleter and does not dissipate from the atmosphere for more than a century after it’s produced.
However, the inhaled anesthetic sevoflurane has much less of an environmental impact than nitrous oxide and other common inhaled agents, so Mashour says it would be a good alternative.
“The overall goal is to shift away from some of these egregious culprits and start making better choices about which drug we use and then also how we use it,” Mashour said.
“The contributions in terms of greenhouse gas effect or ozone-depleting action partly relate to how much is getting pumped out into the atmosphere and that relates directly to how high we have our fresh gas flow,” he added. “If we have, for example, 10 liters going, we’re blowing a lot of anesthetic into the scavenging and waste and atmospheric systems that doesn’t need to be there.”
To that end, Mashour’s colleagues in the Department of Anesthesiology are already leading a national initiative to try to reduce anesthetic gas flow rates through the Multicenter Perioperative Outcomes Group, another quality initiative that includes health centers from across the country.
Mashour plans to roll out other elements of GAIA over a three- to- five-year period.
“We could be doing better,” he said. “Right now, we’re starting the conversations, getting people on board and making structural choices in the department to help make it easy for people to do the right thing.”
JOURNAL
Journal of Clinical Oncology
DOI
METHOD OF RESEARCH
Commentary/editorial
ARTICLE TITLE
Prescriptions for Mitigating Climate Change–Related Externalities in Cancer Care: A Surgeon’s Perspective
ARTICLE PUBLICATION DATE
25-Mar-2022
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Do US hospitals not have incinerators?
Just why did these idiots concentrate on ORs and anaesthetics?
What about all that [sterile] plastic packaging, the drips, the syringes ad nauseam….
“Several inhaled gases regularly used for anesthesia are A-list offenders when it comes to greenhouse gas production. Nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas, is a greenhouse gas, a direct ozone depleter and does not dissipate from the atmosphere for more than a century after it’s produced.”
Have they considered the amount of Nitrous oxide released to the atmosphere as a result of recreational use? The number of small, silver canisters that litter the streets of most UK towns & cities suggest that it is not a small amount.
Not good for life saving surgery but OK for a weekend high? Idiots.
The solution to this crisis is simple. Get a list of all those who believe it and never allow them to have surgery. What a bunch of dummies.
They should try doing something useful. And stop blaming anything and everything as the cause of a non problem.
Distorted or criminal minds.
Can’t believe medicine has fallen that low.
Put these emissions in the context that the total atmosphere weighs 5.5 quadrillion (5,500,000,000,000,000) tonnes.
There was quite a bit of hyperventilating, but the suggested solutions mostly come down to dropping some routine pre-surgery tests which don’t provide much information, changing anaesthetic (it’s amazing that anybody still uses Nitrous), modularising the initial surgical kit and a rather dubious approach to handling theatre waste.
Reading between the lines, it seems there is a “standard” surgical kit used for everything rather than starting with a specialised kit for the type of operation with other, more specialised, kits quickly available if required. Where this becomes a problem is if the instruments which are very rarely used are the ones which are needed right now if something goes wrong
the volume of thrown out inc stainless steel scissors in hospital wound dressing kits is insane! Ive snaffled 2 sets off my doc blue dot =single use
autoclave so much saner and so is OLD fashioned scrubs and op covers etc
This article on “Operating rooms are the climate change contributor no one’s talking about” takes the cake as the most lunatic ever shown on WUWT. Congratulations!
I’ll second that! The lunacy seems to be accelerating.
There was a lot of funding available back in 1998-9 for Y2K remediation, with a lot of hardware and software upgrades. This appears to be analogous.
In case anybody is interested, the preparation work did reveal potential problems and largely headed them off.
And, yes, the most dire predictions were rather exaggerated.
spitting angry@these two fools
theres a reason certain anaesthetics are used, safety!
guess they didnt factor in the travel for the far away docs doing remote surgery?
and as for telelhealth, thats bullsh*t doc cant SEE you properly or touch/listen etc
ok for a repeat script is about all
Just the fact that these “doctors” believe in the climate religion tells me that they are not too very intelligent. Perhaps, in their fields they are brilliant, however, outside anything within their areas of study they show complete ignorance.
Typical of so many of the intelligent folks within the “professional” communities. They are “woke” and don’t even realize it. Or, if they do, they don’t care because the current ideological idiots allow them to proceed within their fields allowing them to become what they wanted all along…rich and elite.
I suspect most medical folks don’t really believe in the climate ideology, they just go along to keep paying the bills.
The medical community accounts for 8.5% of America’s greenhouse gases, per the article. Yet healthcare is about 20% of GDP.
For the “1 billion earth population is ideal” crowd, cancer is a good thing. It helps get the earth’s population down to that level. Cancer surgery is a bad thing, as it delays the earth reaching that goal quicker.
No need to worry; when the Watermelons have eliminated industrial society, we’ll all be dying of cholera, typhus and TB; no one will live long enough to die of cancer.
My beautiful wife of 44 years is fighting cancer. It is the worst trial we’ve ever faced. That these ghouls would diminish her care to push their stupid global warming agenda is beyond belief. I loath them.