| Literature DB >> 36231269 |
Thobile Zikhathile1, Harrison Atagana2, Joseph Bwapwa3, David Sawtell4.
Abstract
Health-Care Risk Waste (HCRW) treatment protects the environment and lives. HCRW is waste from patient diagnostics, immunization, surgery, and therapy. HCRW must be treated before disposal since it pollutes, spreads illnesses, and causes harm. However, waste treatment increases the healthcare sector's carbon footprint, making the healthcare sector a major contributor to anthropogenic climate change. This is because treating HCRW pollutes the environment and requires a lot of energy. Treating HCRW is crucial, but its risks are not well-studied. Unintentionally, treating HCRW leads to climate change. Due to frequent climate-related disasters, present climate-change mitigation strategies are insufficient. All sectors, including healthcare, must act to mitigate and prevent future harms. Healthcare can reduce its carbon footprint to help the environment. All contributing elements must be investigated because healthcare facilities contribute to climate change. We start by evaluating the environmental impact of different HCRW treatment technologies and suggesting strategies to make treatments more sustainable, cost-effective, and reliable to lower the carbon footprint.Entities:
Keywords: climate change; environment; health; health-care risk waste; healthcare; treatment technologies
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36231269 PMCID: PMC9565833 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191911967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1HCRW categories [42].
HCRW generators and management.
| HCRW | Description | Sources | Management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Infectious waste | Waste contaminated with blood and other bodily fluids | Hospitals | Non-Burn Thermal Technologies Autoclaves Hybrid Steam Systems Microwave Units Frictional Heat Treatment Dry Heat Systems Alkaline Hydrolysis |
| Pathological waste | Human tissues | Hospitals | Incineration |
| Sharps waste | Syringes | Hospitals | Non-Burn Thermal Technologies Autoclaves Hybrid Steam Systems Microwave Units Frictional Heat Treatment Dry Heat Systems Alkaline Hydrolysis |
| Chemical waste | Solvents | Hospitals | Ion exchange |
| Pharmaceutical waste | Expired, unused and contaminated drugs | Hospitals | Non-Burn Thermal Technologies Autoclaves Hybrid Steam Systems Microwave Units Frictional Heat Treatment Dry Heat Systems Alkaline Hydrolysis |
| Cytotoxic waste | Waste containing substances with genotoxic properties (i.e., highly hazardous substances that are mutagenic, teratogenic, or carcinogenic), such as cytotoxic drugs used in cancer treatment and their metabolites | Hospitals | Incineration |
| Radioactive waste | Such as products contaminated by radionuclides including radioactive diagnostic material or radiotherapeutic materials | Hospitals | Most radioactive waste requires packaging in specially engineered containers for safe storage and disposal |
HCRW treatment technologies [64].
| Treatment Methods | Description | Types of Waste Treated | Temperature for Treatment | Treatment Time | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Incineration | High-heat treatment converts waste into ash and exhaust gases. | Anatomical, infectious, and pharmaceutical wastes | Primary chamber 800–900 °C | 4–6 h per batch | Suitable for treatment of all types of hazardous HCRW. | Produces air pollutants, carcinogens (dioxins, polychlorinated biphenyls, polycyclic aromatic compounds) and harmful gases (HCl, HF, SO2). |
| Autoclave | Use saturated steam to disinfect infectious waste. | Infectious, pharmaceutical, and sharps | 121–140 °C | 30–60 min per batch | Has better public acceptance than incinerators. | The disinfected waste is landfilled. |
| Microwave | Steam-based technology. Uses microwave disinfection to treat waste. | Infectious, pharmaceutical, and sharps | 95–100 °C | ≥30 min per batch | Has better public acceptance than incinerators. | The disinfected waste is landfilled. |
| Reverse polymerization | Uses microwave energy to treat waste. | Infectious waste | 180–370 °C | 50–80 min per batch | Decreases the quantities of waste. | Use of Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH) and a scrubber to control gaseous emissions. |
| Chemical disinfection | Uses a chemical technology with sodium hypochlorite as a disinfectant. | Liquid waste | 95–155 °C | 25 min exposure per batch | Low air emissions. | Production of liquid waste containing sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl). |
| Pyrolysis | Heats waste organic components under oxygen-free or -depleted conditions, breaks chemical bonds to transform combustible liquid and gas. | Infectious waste | 540–830 °C | 45 min | Pyrolysis technology has a high energy recovery rate, minimal secondary pollution, and sufficient economics. | Commonly used for organic materials. |
| Gasification | Gas cloud formed by the ionization of an inert gas, usually referred to as the fourth state of matter. | Infectious waste | 3000 °C | 1/1000 s | Treats all HCRW. | Expensive. |
Figure 2Components of levels for an effective HRCW management.