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Effects of departmental green anaesthesia interventions on carbon dioxide equivalent emissions: a systematic review
Clinical impacts and solutions
Published British Journal of Anaesthesia July 2025
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
27-06-2025 to 27-06-2026
Available on-demand until 27th June 2026
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Background
Anaesthesia contributes to greenhouse gas emissions and can play a crucial role in reducing the carbon footprint of the global healthcare sector. The aim of this systematic review is to identify which departmental interventions influence estimated carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent emissions of anaesthesia and to quantify their reductions.
Methods
A systematic literature search was conducted through four major electronic databases (Cochrane Library, Embase, MEDLINE, and PubMed) for studies investigating the changes in CO2 equivalent emissions per anaesthetic before and after departmental green anaesthesia interventions. Data were extracted by two independent reviewers. The primary outcomes were mean decrease of CO2 equivalents in kilograms per anaesthetic and total decrease in CO2 equivalents in tonnes. The mean effect was calculated as percentage change per patient and in total.
Results
Of 3987 screened studies, 13 met the criteria for quantitative synthesis and showed low to moderate risk of bias. The following types of departmental sustainability interventions were found: education of staff, decreased use of desflurane and sevoflurane, promotion of TIVA, use of low fresh gas flows, proper waste management, and formation of green teams. The postinterventional total mean decrease of CO2 equivalents in kilograms per anaesthetic was 68.2% (18.6%) and in total tonnes was 75.2% (16.3%).
Conclusions
Our analysis demonstrates the substantial CO2 reduction potential inherent in sustainable anaesthesia programmes. Currently available literature supports staff education on avoidance of desflurane, reduction of volatile anaesthesia, lower fresh gas flow, increased utilisation of TIVA, and implementation of proper waste management protocols in operating rooms as potentially effective interventions.
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