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Environmental sustainability, medical waste management, energy and medicine consumption of the surgical intensive care nurses: A qualitative study

Pollution, environmental and human health | Clinical impacts and solutions

First published: 15 August 2024

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    20-09-2024 to 20-09-2025

    Available on-demand until 20th September 2025

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Article

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

Background

In intensive care units, it is noticeable that there is intensive use of resources in the treatment and care process, leading to a significant amount of waste generation. In addition, the demand for intensive care, increasing life expectancy and surgical interventions, complex comorbidities and ecological crisis make it necessary to make critical care more sustainable.

Aim

To explore the perspectives of nurses working in surgical intensive care units regarding responsible medical waste management, energy and medication consumption.

Study Design

This qualitative descriptive study was conducted in surgical intensive care units of a university hospital in Turkey in November 2023. Twenty-three nurses filled in an introductory form and participated in a semi-structured interview. Data were analysed using inductive content analysis.

Results

Three main themes were determined: environmentally sustainable intensive care, prevention of waste in intensive care; responsible consumption and recycling; suggestions for institutional and individual behavioural change regarding environmental sustainability.

Conclusions

The majority of nurses lack knowledge about sustainable development goals. However, in the intensive care unit, they provided effective and creative solutions for medical waste management, energy and medication consumption and individual and institutional behavioural change regarding environmental sustainability.

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