Tracing the barriers to decarbonising ophthalmology: A review

Author:

Lam Lydia1,Bradbrook Darren23,Gale Jesse45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

2. Surgery and Perioperative Medicine Division Flinders Medical Centre Bedford Park South Australia Australia

3. Southern Adelaide Local Health Network (SALHN) Bedford Park South Australia Australia

4. Department of Surgery & Anaesthesia University of Otago Wellington Wellington New Zealand

5. Ophthalmology Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand Capital Coast & Hutt Valley Wellington New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractAs climate change demands increasingly urgent mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions, the health sector needs to do its part to decarbonise. Ophthalmologists share concerns about climate change and seek opportunities to reduce their environmental impact. When measuring the footprint of ophthalmology, major contributions are from patient travel to clinics, and from the large amounts of single‐use disposable materials that are consumed during surgeries and sterile procedures. Ophthalmic services in India have already demonstrated systems that consume far fewer of these products through efficient throughput of patients and the safe reuse of many items, while maintaining equivalent safety and quality outcomes. Choosing these low‐cost low‐emission options would seem obvious, but many ophthalmologists experience barriers that prevent them operating as Indian surgeons do. Understanding these barriers to change is a crucial step in the decarbonisation of ophthalmology and the health sector more broadly.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ophthalmology

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