Transcript Slide 1

Greening the Health Sector
Overview
• The objectives of this class are to:
– provide information on the health system’s use of
energy and toxic substances
– describe the health system’s generation of waste
– offer ideas about what nurses can do to decrease
the environmental impact of hospitals and other
health-care facilities
Why is greening health care an issue for nurses?
“There are broad aspects of social justice that are associated with health
and well-being and that ethical nursing practice addresses. These
aspects relate to the need for change in systems and societal
structures in order to create greater equity for all. Nurses should
endeavour as much as possible, individually and collectively, to
advocate for and work toward eliminating social inequities by:
vi. Supporting environmental preservation and restoration and advocating
for initiatives that reduce environmentally harmful practices in order to
promote health and well-being.”
Code of Ethics for Registered Nurses
(CNA, in press)
Examples of nurses’ work in protecting the environment
Advocating for a mercury-free environment:
• Jane initially joined the hospital’s green team to
advocate for a mercury-free environment in the family
practice department. She has raised the issue of
converting to mercury-free blood pressure equipment
with the hospital’s management.
• Gloria has advocated for a mercury-free environment at
the monthly meetings of the occupational health and
safety committee. Fluorescent light bulbs and mercurybased blood pressure equipment are now being replaced
with mercury-free products.
Energy Use and Toxic Substances in the Health
System
Energy use and toxic substances
• Fossil fuels:
– Use of fossil fuels leads to the production of
greenhouse gases (GHGs)
– GHG production contributes to climate change and
poor outdoor air quality
– Canadian hospitals don’t fare well in international
comparisons of energy use
• Toxic substances:
– Examples are mercury, cleaning products, di(2ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) in polyvinyl chloride
(PVC) products and pesticides
– Patients and staff are exposed
– Toxic substances contaminate the environment
Energy use and greenhouse gas production
© Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, represented by the Minister of Health (2005)
Toxic
substances
used in
hospitals:
mercury
Credit: Getty Images
© Environment Canada
Exposure to mercury
© Environment Canada: http://www.ec.gc.ca/MERCURY/EH/EN/eh-ec.cfm
Use of toxic products: DEHP in PVC plastics
• PVC is a primary component of 25% of all medical
products.
– DEHP is an additive that makes PVC flexible.
– DEHP does not bind well with the plastic; it leaches out.
– DEHP has adverse effects on the developing testes of
young animals.
• Health Canada has recommended that exposures be
reduced in high-risk populations.
• The cost of alternative products will come down as
demand for them increases.
Generation of Waste in the Health System
Credit: Getty Images
Waste generation
• Health-care facilities produce:
– recyclable and compostable waste such as paper,
cardboard and food scraps
– biomedical and infectious wastes that require special
handling
– waste destined for landfill sites, such as many plastic
and polystyrene products
• When waste streams are not clearly separated,
too much waste ends up in medical incinerators:
– aging hospital incinerators are the largest contributors
to dioxin and furan emissions into the air in Canada
Why are dioxin emissions a concern?
Incineration of
medical waste
Dioxin discharge into the air
Deposition on pasture
Dioxins
Ingestion by grazing animals
Buildup in meat and milk
Ingestion by humans
© Health Canada
What can nurses do?
Strategies for reducing energy use
• Work with green teams to:
– support the use of energy-efficient light bulbs, turn off
lights and equipment when not in use, promote the use
of local foods and make sure doors are closed as often
as possible to prevent heat exchange with the outdoors
– upgrade insulation and check for condensation and
water penetration
– draft-proof windows and doors
– apply for funding for renovations that reduce energy
use, such as double- or triple-glazed windows,
preferably with low-emissivity glass
– install automatic doors in locations where external
doors are frequently left open
– increase use of public transit and bicycles
© Health Canada
Strategies for reducing waste
Nurses can be very influential in:
• introducing recycling programs for hospital waste, 45% of which may
be paper
• supporting the purchase of reusable linens in hospital and clinic
settings and reducing the use of disposable linens
• asking suppliers to reduce packaging
• ensuring, by training staff and making waste receptacles available,
that only material that needs incineration goes to the medical
incinerator
• working with other members of the hospital staff to purchase healthcare products that do not contain toxic substances so that these
substances do not end up in the waste stream
– Identify and reduce the number of medical products containing mercury.
– Investigate the possibility of reusing single-use products and purchasing
reusable products.
– Select the least toxic cleansers available.
– Support appropriate waste segregation and recycling.
© Planet Ark
© Environment Canada
Strategies for reducing the use of toxic substances
Work with green teams to:
• conduct an audit to identify sources of toxic substances,
such as mercury, and mark them with a sticker to alert
staff that they require special disposal.
• identify alternative products and develop a plan,
including a budget, to use them. Categorize toxic items
as immediately or gradually replaceable.
• choose non-toxic cleaning and sterilizing alternatives.
• identify less toxic building materials and furniture.
Conclusions
• Nurses can encourage health-care facilities to minimize
their environmental footprint by reducing their energy
use, their use of products containing toxic substances,
and their waste production.
• Other steps to creating sustainable hospitals include
exploring the potential for major renovations that will
further increase energy efficiency.
• Reducing the environmental footprint of health care more
generally involves exploring the sustainability of the
health system and identifying more effective ways to use
resources across the system (Guenther & Gilmore-Hall,
2007).
Photos: Comstock; Corbis; Getty Images
© Canadian Nurses Association, 2008