Why be sustainable? The Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists Professional Document PS64: Statement on Environmental Sustainability in Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine Practice and its accompanying background paper

Author:

McGain Forbes1ORCID,Ma Scott CY2,Burrell Rob H3,Percival Vanessa G4,Roessler Peter5,Weatherall Andrew D6ORCID,Weber Ingo A7,Kayak Eugenie A8

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Western Health, Footscray Hospital, Melbourne, Australia

2. Department of Children’s Anaesthesia, Women’s and Children’s Hospital, Adelaide, Australia

3. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Middlemore Hospital, Auckland, New Zealand

4. Armadale Kelmscott District Memorial Hospital, Perth, Australia

5. Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists, Melbourne, Australia

6. Department of Anaesthesia, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, Australia

7. Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, Flinders University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia

8. Department of Anaesthesia, Alfred Health, Melbourne, Australia

Abstract

Healthcare’s environmental sustainability is increasingly an area of research and advocacy focus. The Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA) has produced a professional document, PS64, Statement on Environmental Sustainability in Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine Practice, and a background paper, PS64 BP. The purpose of the statement is to affirm ANZCA’s commitment to environmental sustainability and support anaesthetists in promoting environmentally sustainable work practices. This article presents the main features of PS64 and its background paper, and the associated supporting evidence. The healthcare sector is highly interconnected with activities that emit pollution to air, water and soils, considerably adding to humanity’s collective ecological footprint. As anaesthetists, we are uniquely high-carbon doctors due to our work anaesthetising with greenhouse gases (particularly desflurane and nitrous oxide) and our exposure and contribution to large amounts of resource and energy use and waste generation in operating theatres. Discussion is made of the improving research base of anaesthetic life-cycle assessments—that is, cradle-to-grave studies of how much energy, water and so on a product or process requires throughout its entire life. Thereafter, reducing, reusing and recycling as well as water use are examined. Ongoing research efforts within environmentally sustainable anaesthesia are highlighted. Environmentally sustainable anaesthesia requires scholarship, health advocacy, leadership, communication and collaboration. The focus is placed on practical initiatives within PS64 and the background paper that can be achieved by all anaesthetists striving towards more sustainable healthcare practices that reduce waste, reap financial benefits and improve health.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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