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The carbon footprint of arthroscopic procedures
Clinical impacts and solutions | Sustainable business and solutions
Published Online 29 June 2023
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
10-06-2025 to 10-12-2025
Available on-demand until 10th December 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Virtual
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Introduction
The healthcare sector contributes the equivalent of 4.4% of global net emissions to the climate carbon footprint; between 20% and 70% of healthcare waste originates from a hospital's operating theatre and up to 90% of waste is sent for costly and unneeded hazardous waste processing. This study aimed to quantify the amount and type of waste produced during an arthroscopic anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) and an arthroscopic rotator cuff repair (RCR), calculate the carbon footprint and assess the cost of the waste disposal.
Methods
The amount of waste generated from ACLR and RCR procedures was calculated across a range of hospital sites. The waste was separated primarily into clean and contaminated, paper or plastic. Both carbon footprint and cost of disposal across the hospital sites was subsequently calculated.
Results
RCR generated 3.3–15.5kg of plastic waste and 0.9–2.3kg of paper waste. ACLR generated 2.4–9.6kg of plastic waste and 1.1–1.6kg of paper waste. The cost to process waste varies widely between hospital sites, waste disposal contractors and method of waste disposal. The annual burden of the included hospital sites for the arthroscopic procedures undertaken was 6.2 tonnes of carbon dioxide.
Conclusions
The data collected demonstrated a significant variability in waste production and cost for waste disposal between hospital sites. At a national level, consideration should be given to the procurement of appropriate products such that waste can be efficiently recycled or disposed of by environmentally sustainable methods.
Contact details
Email address
Telephone number
020 7869 6300

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