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Published in: Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery 1/2023

01-12-2023 | Climate Change | Brief Report

Reusable scrub caps are cost-effective and help reduce the climate footprint of surgery

Authors: Divyansh Agarwal, Tina Bharani, Wynne Armand, Jonathan E. Slutzman, John T. Mullen

Published in: Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Background

As the US healthcare sector contributes to 5–10% of national CO2 emissions, with a substantial contribution from surgical services, a collective effort is important to minimize the climate footprint of surgery. Solid plastic waste generated from single-use items in operating rooms is a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. To address this problem, we implemented a pilot study to replace single-use scrub caps with reusable caps.

Methods

Ninety-two surgical trainees at the Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, were provided reusable personalized scrub caps. Over 6 months, their use of the reusable cap was compared with corresponding use of disposable single-use caps. We then used the cost of raw materials, fabric and cap manufacturing, transportation, and end-of-life/waste treatment to perform an economic and environmental burden analysis.

Results

After 6 months of reusable scrub cap use, 33 participants (51.6%) reported that due to their use of a reusable scrub cap, their utilization of disposable bouffant or caps had decreased by 76–100%. This was associated with a significant reduction in the use of single-use caps after adjusting for surgical case volume. The carbon footprint of single-use scrub caps was significantly higher than reusable caps during the study period. Reusable scrub cap usage also strongly correlated with substantial reductions in energy consumption and freshwater toxicity.

Conclusions

Reusable personalized cloth scrub caps are cost-effective and can help reduce surgery’s carbon footprint by reducing waste generated from disposable scrub cap use. More programs should consider replacing single-use polypropylene caps with reusable scrub caps for their operating room staff.
Literature
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go back to reference Shallwani H, Shakir HJ, Aldridge AM, Donovan MT, Levy EI, Gibbons KJ (2018) Mandatory change from surgical skull caps to bouffant caps among operating room personnel does not reduce surgical site infections in class I surgical cases: a single-center experience with more than 15 000 patients. Neurosurgery 82(4):548–554. https://doi.org/10.1093/neuros/nyx211CrossRefPubMed Shallwani H, Shakir HJ, Aldridge AM, Donovan MT, Levy EI, Gibbons KJ (2018) Mandatory change from surgical skull caps to bouffant caps among operating room personnel does not reduce surgical site infections in class I surgical cases: a single-center experience with more than 15 000 patients. Neurosurgery 82(4):548–554. https://​doi.​org/​10.​1093/​neuros/​nyx211CrossRefPubMed
Metadata
Title
Reusable scrub caps are cost-effective and help reduce the climate footprint of surgery
Authors
Divyansh Agarwal
Tina Bharani
Wynne Armand
Jonathan E. Slutzman
John T. Mullen
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Keyword
Climate Change
Published in
Langenbeck's Archives of Surgery / Issue 1/2023
Print ISSN: 1435-2443
Electronic ISSN: 1435-2451
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00423-023-03107-9

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