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Strategies and tactics to reduce the impact of healthcare on climate change : Systematic review
Braithwaite, Jeffrey ; Smith, Carolynn L. ; Leask, Elle ; Wijekulasuriya, Shalini ; Brooke-Cowden, Kalissa ; Fisher, Georgia ; Patel, Romika ; Pagano, Lisa ; Rahimi-Ardabili, Hania ; Spanos, Samantha ... show 9 more
Braithwaite, Jeffrey
Smith, Carolynn L.
Leask, Elle
Wijekulasuriya, Shalini
Brooke-Cowden, Kalissa
Fisher, Georgia
Patel, Romika
Pagano, Lisa
Rahimi-Ardabili, Hania
Spanos, Samantha
Author
Braithwaite, Jeffrey
Smith, Carolynn L.
Leask, Elle
Wijekulasuriya, Shalini
Brooke-Cowden, Kalissa
Fisher, Georgia
Patel, Romika
Pagano, Lisa
Rahimi-Ardabili, Hania
Spanos, Samantha
Rojas, Christina
Partington, Andrew
McQuillan, Ella
Dammery, Genevieve
Carrigan, Ann
Ehrenfeld, Lauren
Coiera, Enrico
Westbrook, Johanna
Zurynski, Yvonne
Smith, Carolynn L.
Leask, Elle
Wijekulasuriya, Shalini
Brooke-Cowden, Kalissa
Fisher, Georgia
Patel, Romika
Pagano, Lisa
Rahimi-Ardabili, Hania
Spanos, Samantha
Rojas, Christina
Partington, Andrew
McQuillan, Ella
Dammery, Genevieve
Carrigan, Ann
Ehrenfeld, Lauren
Coiera, Enrico
Westbrook, Johanna
Zurynski, Yvonne
Abstract
Objective To review the international literature and assess the ways healthcare systems are mitigating and can mitigate their carbon footprint, which is currently estimated to be more than 4.4% of global emissions.
Design Systematic review of empirical studies and grey literature to examine how healthcare services and institutions are limiting their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
Data sources Eight databases and authoritative reports were searched from inception dates to November 2023.
Eligibility criteria for selecting studies Teams of investigators screened relevant publications against the inclusion criteria (eg, in English; discussed impact of healthcare systems on climate change), applying four quality appraisal tools, and results are reported in accordance with PRISMA (preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses).
Results Of 33 737 publications identified, 32 998 (97.8%) were excluded after title and abstract screening; 536 (72.5%) of the remaining publications were excluded after full text review. Two additional papers were identified, screened, and included through backward citation tracking. The 205 included studies applied empirical (n=88, 42.9%), review (n=60, 29.3%), narrative descriptive (n=53, 25.9%), and multiple (n=4, 2.0%) methods. More than half of the publications (51.5%) addressed the macro level of the healthcare system. Nine themes were identified using inductive analysis: changing clinical and surgical practices (n=107); enacting policies and governance (n=97); managing physical waste (n=83); changing organisational behaviour (n=76); actions of individuals and groups (eg, advocacy, community involvement; n=74); minimising travel and transportation (n=70); using tools for measuring GHG emissions (n=70); reducing emissions related to infrastructure (n=63); and decarbonising the supply chain (n=48).
Conclusions Publications presented various strategies and tactics to reduce GHG emissions. These included changing clinical and surgical practices; using policies such as benchmarking and reporting at a facility level, and financial levers to reduce emissions from procurement; reducing physical waste; changing organisational culture through workforce training; supporting education on the benefits of decarbonisation; and involving patients in care planning. Numerous tools and frameworks were presented for measuring GHG emissions, but implementation and evaluation of the sustainability of initiatives were largely missing. At the macro level, decarbonisation approaches focused on energy grid emissions, infrastructure efficiency, and reducing supply chain emissions, including those from agriculture and supply of food products. Decarbonisation mechanisms at the micro and meso system levels ranged from reducing low value care, to choosing lower GHG options (eg, anaesthetic gases, rescue inhalers), to reducing travel. Based on these strategies and tactics, this study provides a framework to support the decarbonisation of healthcare systems.
Systematic review registration PROSPERO: CRD42022383719.
Keywords
Date
2024
Type
Journal article
Journal
BMJ
Book
Volume
387
Issue
Page Range
1-17
Article Number
Article 387
ACU Department
School of Behavioural and Health Sciences
Faculty of Health Sciences
Faculty of Health Sciences
Relation URI
Source URL
Event URL
Open Access Status
Published as ‘gold’ (paid) open access
License
CC BY-NC 4.0
File Access
Open
Notes
This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
