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Handling ‘carbon footprint’ in orthopaedics
Clinical impacts and solutions | Sustainable business and solutions
Published Online 2 April 2024
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
09-06-2025 to 09-06-2026
Available on-demand until 9th June 2026
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Introduction
The National Health Service contributes 4%–5% of England and Wales’ greenhouse gases and a quarter of all public sector waste. Between 20% and 33% of healthcare waste originates from a hospital’s operating room, and up to 90% of waste is sent for costly and unneeded hazardous waste processing. The goal of this study was to quantify the amount and type of waste produced during a selection of common trauma and elective orthopaedic operations, and to calculate the carbon footprint of processing the waste.
Methods
Waste generated for both elective and trauma procedures was separated primarily into clean and contaminated, paper or plastic, and then weighed. The annual carbon footprint for each operation at each site was subsequently calculated.
Results
Elective procedures can generate up to 16.5kg of plastic waste per procedure. Practices such as double-draping the patient contribute to increasing the quantity of waste. Over the procedures analysed, the mean total plastic waste at the hospital sites varied from 6 to 12kg. One hospital site undertook a pilot of switching disposable gowns for reusable ones with a subsequent reduction of 66% in the carbon footprint and a cost saving of £13,483.89.
Conclusions
This study sheds new light on the environmental impact of waste produced during trauma and elective orthopaedic procedures. Mitigating the environmental impact of the operating room requires a collective drive for a culture change to sustainability and social responsibility. Each clinician can have an impact upon the carbon footprint of their operating theatre.
Contact details
Email address
Telephone number
020 7869 6300

Royal College of Surgeons of England
35-43 Lincoln's Inn Fields
London
WC2A 3PE