“Unfortunately, in our quest to take care of individual patients,
we’re causing this undue harm,” coauthor Dr. Jodi Sherman, from Yale
School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, said in a phone
interview.
While training to become an anesthesiologist, Sherman saw what she
described as a disturbing amount of waste in the operating room.
“I realized that as much as I love being a doctor, I could not in
good conscience practice unless I simultaneously worked to protect
the environment from the hidden harm from healthcare itself,” she
said.
In 2009, when she was a senior resident at Stanford University, she
gave a talk on healthcare pollution. The other doctors challenged
her about the magnitude of the problem. She looked for data but
found none.
So she enlisted environmental engineer Matthew Eckelman, and the two
began quantifying healthcare pollution.
Their new study, published in PLoS ONE, estimates that damage from
pollutants connected to healthcare leads to an annual loss of
405,000 to 470,000 years of healthy life, or so-called
disability-adjusted life years. The loss equates to roughly the same
number of Americans as die every year from preventable medical
errors: 44,000 to 98,000, the researchers say.
Moreover, the pollution is growing. In the past 10 years, greenhouse
gas emissions for the U.S. healthcare sector shot up by more than 30
percent, bringing the total to nearly 10 percent of the nation’s
2013 emissions, the study found.
Sherman and Eckelman, a professor at Northeastern University in
Boston, used an economic model based on federal data to calculate
healthcare sector pollutants from 2003 to 2013. They estimated
emissions from heating and cooling, electricity and energy-intensive
goods and services in hospitals, doctors’ offices, nursing homes,
pharmaceutical and medical-device manufacturers as well as
government programs like Medicaid. Then they assessed public health
impacts.
Prior research had calculated that healthcare activities emit 8
percent of the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions, the authors write.
But other pollutants from the healthcare industry have not been
previously reported.
The new study looks beyond the carbon footprint. It found that
direct and indirect emissions from healthcare caused 12 percent of
acid rain, 10 percent of smog formation and 9 percent of respiratory
disease from particulate matter in 2013.
The researchers say there’s a “critical knowledge gap” in the
medical community about the health consequences of unnecessary
waste, and they urge resource-conservation education and leadership.
Dr. Howard Frumkin, dean of the University of Washington School of
Public Health in Seattle, also sees a gap.
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“Few healthcare leaders are highly informed about environmental
dimensions of healthcare delivery – about the economic consequences,
the health consequences or the moral aspects,” he told Reuters
Health by email.
Frumkin, who wasn’t involved in the current study, commended it for
shining a light on healthcare pollution. “Greater awareness should
lead to greater adoption of environmentally sound practices,” he
said.
Medical professionals can be better environmental stewards without
sacrificing quality of care, according to Sherman and Eckelman.
“We don’t want to imply that we should compromise on patient care
for the sake of these emissions,” Eckelman told Reuters Health. “But
there are many opportunities to reduce this waste without
compromising quality of care and without affecting the patient
experience at all.”
Well-meaning regulatory efforts to reduce infections have led to the
increasing use of single-use disposables and more medical waste,
Sherman said.
“Virtually everything is disposable, from linens to unused drugs
that were opened and never administered. Probably every physician
would agree they see enormous amounts of waste and disposables, and
they just don’t know what to do about it,” Sherman said.
“You certainly need to use sterile and disposable goods,” she said.
“But this trend is just over the top.”
Reuters reported early this year that American doctors and hospital
throw out almost $3 billion in unused cancer drugs each year because
the medicines come in supersized single-use packages. (See http://reut.rs/1MuX7m3.)
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Oh7FGP PLoS ONE, online June 9, 2016.
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