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More People Can Access Surgery. That's Great For Them, Awful For The Planet

A baby is born by C-Section at the Partners In Health supported Butaro Hospital in northern Rwanda. Rwanda has a universal health insurance "Mutuelles de Sante". Rwandans pay only two dollars($2) a year for health insurance. The cost to see a nurse at a health center is $ .50 US cents. | Location: Burera, Rwanda. (Photo by William Campbell/Corbis via Getty Images)
William Campbell/Corbis via Getty Images
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A baby is born by C-Section at the Partners In Health supported Butaro Hospital in northern Rwanda. Rwanda has a universal health insurance "Mutuelles de Sante". Rwandans pay only two dollars($2) a year for health insurance. The cost to see a nurse at a health center is $ .50 US cents. | Location: Burera, Rwanda. (Photo by William Campbell/Corbis via Getty Images)

Add surgeries to the list of human activities making the climate hotter and more volatile.

"Surgical, obstetric and anesthesia care are one of the major contributors to climate change within the health sector," according to an article published this month in The Lancet scientific journal by doctors and researchers from Harvard University's T.H. Chan School of Public Health. They worry the climate impact of current surgical practices will get worse as lifesaving procedures become accessible to the 5 billion people around the world, mostly in low- and middle-income countries, who currently can't get them.

"We do need to get more people surgical care," says Dr. Aaron Bernstein, co-author of the article and interim director of the Center for Climate Health and the Global Environment at Harvard. "But if we do it in a model that has been developed in rich countries, it will break the climate – and we can't afford that."

Globally, health care is responsible for about 4.6% of greenhouse gas emissions, according to a 2019 report in The Lancet. A quarter of that is from the U.S., despite it having 4% of the global population.

"If the health sector globally were a country, it would be the fifth [largest] emitter of greenhouse gases," says Susan Wilburn, international sustainability director at Health Care Without Harm, an organization working to reduce the environmental footprint of health care globally.

The article zeroes in on surgical care, because it's the most energy- and waste-intensive specialty in health care. Operating rooms – "ORs" for short – can consume three to six times more energy per square foot than elsewhere in a hospital, according to another Lancet study. That's because heating, ventilation and air conditioning in operating rooms run on high even when there isn't a patient in them. The article says that if hospitals only ventilated operating rooms when they're occupied, they would significantly reduce energy consumption.

Operating rooms also produce 20% to 30% of a facility's waste by some estimates. and a third of its biohazard waste, which must be disposed of through incineration.

The use of certain anesthetic gases – like nitrous oxide and desflurane – is another major source of greenhouse gases in operating rooms, according to the article. Anesthetics that are injected instead of inhaled, on the other hand, leave a minimal carbon footprint.

"The easiest thing we can do is stop wasting so much," says Jodi Sherman, associate professor of anesthesiology and epidemiology in environmental health sciences at Yale University. "We waste a tremendous amount."

Besides wasting energy, Sherman says there are many other inefficiencies in the health care system contributing to climate change. For example, nearly $3 billion in chemotherapy drugs were being thrown out in the U.S. annually because the single-use vials were too big, according to a 2016 Washington Post article.

Additionally, too many tools and devices are unwrapped in operating rooms to have them available in case they're needed, says Bernstein, who is also a pediatrician at Boston Children's Hospital. The packaging is discarded, as are any disposable tools, even if they aren't used because they're no longer sterile.

"The more stuff we use, the more stuff is manufactured," Sherman says. "The more stuff is manufactured, the more energy we're using and the more stuff we have to treat when we throw it away."

Kaeleigh Sheehan with Practice Greenhealth, an organization that helps the health care industry adopt environmentally sustainable solutions, says she has experienced plenty of pushback against sustainability initiatives from surgeons and other members of the sector.

"There is still the perception that green products are more costly, when that's not always the case," Sheehan says. Additionally, some critics think sustainability practices take too much time to do or isn't as safe, she says. Others aren't interested in changing habits that have worked so far.

But the article warns that climate change is already having a negative effect on the ability of doctors to serve their patients. Not only are diseases changing and worsening because of increasing temperatures and pollution, but climate disasters, like heat waves, storms and fires, are also destroying hospitals, cutting off power and interrupting supply chains.

Bernstein says it's "absolutely" possible to increase access to surgical care without "breaking the climate," despite challenges. For example, biomedical devices should be labeled with their energy efficiency rating, like refrigerators and TVs are, Wilburn suggests.

Developing countries could also skip the wasteful, carbon-intensive practices prevalent in wealthier nations and go straight to sustainable options. Butaro Hospital in Rwanda, for example, is designed so that natural wind flows ventilate surgical suites, eliminating the need to burn fossil fuels to mechanically ventilate them. In Haiti, Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais is solar-powered, which has allowed the hospital to operate at lower cost, without interruptions. Power outages in the city of Mirebalais average three hours per day and are worse during disasters such as hurricanes. Another study found that cataract surgery methods in southern India – using manual, reusable tools – were cheaper, faster, produced fewer emissions and had a low infection rate compared to how the surgery is usually done in the West with an ultrasonic machine.

"These are real windows into the future of sustainable health care in surgical practice," Bernstein says.

And it's something that wealthier countries can learn from.

"Sometimes wealthy countries tend to think that our approach is best," Sheehan says, "when oftentimes, there is something to be learned from countries that are working with [fewer] resources."

Joanne Lu is a freelance journalist who covers global poverty and inequity. Her work has appeared inHumanosphere ,The Guardian ,Global Washington andWar is Boring . Follow her on Twitter: @joannelu

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Joanne Lu