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The carbon footprint of group and save in elective and emergency surgery

Clinical impacts and solutions

Published Online 13 June 2025

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    27-03-2026 to 27-03-2027

    Available on-demand until 27th March 2027

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Publication

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

Introduction

Climate change is a significant threat to human health, and surgical care is a major contributor to the carbon footprint of hospital medicine. There is wide variation in perioperative group and save (G&S) blood testing that lacks an evidence base. Eliminating low-value clinical investigations in surgical pathways such as the G&S could lead to significant carbon and cost savings.

Methods

All operations within the trust over a 6-month period and all packed red cell requests made within the same timeframe were analysed retrospectively. Patients were categorised by operation and cross-referenced with transfusion data to determine the transfusion rate of each procedure. The carbon footprint (g CO2e) of a single G&S was calculated using a bottom-up approach.

Results

Overall, 15,293 operations and 637 red cell requests were included for analysis. Most transfusions across all operation types occurred after the operation day, and only 36 elective cases required intraoperative transfusions. The carbon footprint of the G&S was calculated at 0.43kg CO2e for an inpatient sample, and 7kg CO2e for an outpatient sample. Eliminating the second G&S in elective cases with a transfusion rate <1% could save 9 tonnes of CO2e per year, the equivalent of 24,000 miles in a passenger vehicle.

Conclusions

Transfusion requirements vary significantly for different operation types. Guidelines surrounding perioperative G&S testing should reflect this, which could save avoidable carbon emissions, cost and resources.

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