How can we address the ever-pressing need to ‘green up’ surgical practice in the National Health Service?

Clinical practice has inadvertently changed after the COVID-19 pandemic and currently the need to provide sustainable surgical services is more pressing than ever. The National Health Service has committed to a long-term efficient plan to reduce carbon footprint but there is no detailed plan for sur...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 2022-06, Vol.115 (6), p.213-219
Hauptverfasser: Anastasopoulos, Nikolaos-Andreas, Papalois, Vassilios
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container_title Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
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creator Anastasopoulos, Nikolaos-Andreas
Papalois, Vassilios
description Clinical practice has inadvertently changed after the COVID-19 pandemic and currently the need to provide sustainable surgical services is more pressing than ever. The National Health Service has committed to a long-term efficient plan to reduce carbon footprint but there is no detailed plan for surgical practice, the domain that contributes the most to hospital-derived pollution. A series of consecutive steps and measures ought to be taken, starting from a hybrid approach quantifying surgically attributed carbon footprint. Then, a variety of suggested measures can be widely discussed and accordingly applied on a wider or more local level. Appropriate training should always precede implementing new practices to ensure that staff is familiar with these. These measures cover a broad range and should be arranged on a patient-centred basis from preoperative preconditioning to an effective follow-up. The need for more intense research and implementation of enhanced recovery protocols is widely discussed. Also, the necessity of green research and reinvestment of materials and resources is highlighted. A change of philosophy from a cradle-to-grave approach to a repurposing approach is suggested. We are confident that a new era is dawning in surgical practice and teamwork is the key for providing greener surgical services.
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title How can we address the ever-pressing need to ‘green up’ surgical practice in the National Health Service?
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