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Health & Wellness

On a Sick Planet, Hospitals Must Go Green

By Stacy Malkan, Conscious Choice. Posted March 19, 2007.


Health care officials are finally recognizing that a cleaner, greener hospital keeps the whole community well.
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A plate of healthy greens, a breath of fresh air -- hospitals are probably the last place you'd expect to find such age-old aides of healing.

While walking the stuffy hallways of today's typical health care establishments, you're more likely to encounter a plate-full of something bland and wiggly and breathe in a lung-full of toxic fumes.

It's a sad irony of modern living that the health care industry -- the largest single industrial sector in the US economy, and one that generates 2 million tons of waste per year -- adds to the toxic load in a polluted environment that is, in turn, making people sick.

Chronic diseases and conditions now affect more than one third of the US population, according to the Centers for Disease Control. In spite of medical advancements, scientific evidence shows an increase in asthma, autism, learning disabilities, birth defects, childhood brain cancer, endometriosis and other chronic conditions that are linked to toxic pollutants.

Historically, the health care industry has been part of the problem. In 1995, for example, medical waste incinerators were the number-one source of dioxin (the most potent carcinogen known to man) and were responsible for 10 percent of mercury emissions, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency.

"Of all the ways to fill hospital beds, burning medical waste shouldn't be one of them," declared protest posters in demonstrations across the country, while advocates pushed for stricter pollution-control regulations and urged hospitals to switch to safer alternatives. A decade later, more than 5,000 medical waste incinerators have closed in the US, and fewer than 100 remain. Thousands of hospitals are also phasing out products that contain mercury.

Shifting the Market

Which brings us to the good news: Even as it has contributed to the problem, the health care sector has demonstrated it can be a large part of the solution.

"As an industry with massive buying power, and one that values health as a core part of its mission, the health care industry can and is shifting the market toward healthier and more sustainable products and practices," says Laura Brannen, director of Hospitals for a Healthy Environment, a non-profit that works with hospitals to eliminate mercury, reduce waste and choose less toxic products.

Imagine, for instance, cancer treatment centers built without materials linked to cancer. Pediatric clinics free of chemicals that trigger asthma. Hospitals that serve fresh food grown by local farmers. Imagine the health care industry at the vanguard of a new sustainable green economy that is compatible with living systems. This vision is starting to take root at major hospitals and health care systems across the country.

As one example of health care's power to shift markets, Kaiser Permanente, the nation's largest non-profit health care system, has required building materials for some 30-million square feet of new construction to be free of PVC plastic, a material that is toxic throughout its lifecycle.


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See more stories tagged with: hospitals, green, health care, pollution, sustainability

Stacy Malkan is communications director for Health Care Without Harm, a coalition of 450 groups in 55 countries working to transform the health care industry. Stacy's book on toxic chemicals in cosmetics is due out this Fall.

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Toxic mix of money-chasing and the worshiping of institutional science
Posted by: Bobsays on Mar 19, 2007 4:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Healthcare has become so toxic because doctors chase bucks over helping people, and institutional science, beholden to private business, skews all priorities.

The best way to see how awful the whole sector is to propose the founding of a hospital somewhere. See what oleaginous snakes will come forward to try and fleece the hospital to the max. Patients will come last in the fight.

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And much, much more!
Posted by: JPHickey on Mar 19, 2007 5:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article missed half of the most important factors. Formaldehyde from glued pressed-wood construction materials make most U.S. construction toxic for years, including hospitals. I can't believe the most prosperous nation on the planet would continue such self-destructive practices.

Next come highly toxic pest and weed control treatments, as well as dangerously poisonous housekeeping chemicals. The environment and air quality must be as pure as possible! And alternaive highly effective and reasonably priced products are readily available. Not only that, but do we want the help to be exposed to high doses of these highly concentated poisons? Do we want gardeners coming down with cancer, or the housekeepers coming down with lung damage?

Not only that, but hospital staff need to depend on constant washing up with non-toxic soap and water, not antibactericidal soaps that actually facilitate the develoment of more potent bacteria and viruses, as well as flowing into our water treatment facilities which are unable to decontaminate them.

Hospitals, along with schools and public buildings, must set the trend toward healthier, greener environments. There are so many unnoticed rewards to lightenng the toxic load in obvious physical health, as well as less often considered increase in mental lucidity. Plus life is just better when we feel better!

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How about employees?
Posted by: mcdn on Mar 19, 2007 6:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Interesting article, it raises some good points. While 'fixing' (for lack of a better word) the problem through the development of green hospitals is more a band-aid soluton than anything else, this article goes far in demonstrating some of the work place hazards hospital employees face daily. Soon hopefully, those on the front lines of health care will get the recognition and attention they deserve.
m in cdn

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On a Sick Planet, Hospitals Must Go Green: i.e Medical Cannabis
Posted by: YinRising on Mar 19, 2007 11:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
heh heh, couldn't help myself on that one.

Seriously though,

It's criminal how the government arrests medical cannabis patients and their providers but allows the manufacturers of PVC to remain free to make a profit, despite the well documented toxicity of their product and it's derivatives.

By the way, I wonder how much PVC is in the Oriental Rugs in the VIP suites at Walter Reed.

http://www.crooksandliars.com/2007/03/19/ vip-ward-at-walter-reed-comes-under-scrutiny/
(erase space before " vip")

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my mom's hospital stay
Posted by: Beck on Mar 19, 2007 12:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Over three months ago, my mom went in the hospital for back surgery, greatly needed. Since then, she's had a series of problems, all caused by being in the hospital itself. Each new infection causes a problem with its treatment, and each problem sets back her physical therapy so that she is getting farther and farther behind the longer she's there, and not better. At the age of 83, she could be caught in a cycle that will not end with her back in her house. The surgery fixed her back miraculously, pain gone instantly, but the hospital stay itself may doom her.

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» RE: my mom's hospital stay Posted by: hansennancykay
bring back the autoclave
Posted by: LarryGroff on Mar 19, 2007 1:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I used to work as a nurse in various hospitals for over 25 years. This is a great article that touches on important issues. One other aspect of greening a hospital is that medical supply companies have greatly contributed to toxic waste by making almost all instruments for procedures disposable plastics of some sort. Granted, many of these items are that way by necessity but years ago most instruments were reused and sterilized with the autoclave, you hardly ever see that used nowadays.

Overwhelming amounts of trash go to the landfill from hospitals that could have been recycled or made more green from the ground up. The ability to charge the whole item to the patient/insurance factors in as well. The profit motive in hospital almost guarantees they will always look to either the cheapest way of doing something or what will make them them the most money. Still, its good to read that at least a few hospitals are moving in the right direction. But they have a very long way to go.

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Hospitals only 1/3rd of the Problem
Posted by: dayahka on Mar 19, 2007 2:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The so-called US Health Care System has three parts--doctors, pharmacies, and hospitals. If you want to get sick, go see a doctor; if you want to go broke, go to the pharmacy; if you want to die, go to a hospital. If you want to stay healthy, stay away from all three...Trying to "fix" one part of this dysfunctional system cannot work. The article is filled with a little too much hope and naivete and too little scepticism.

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» You are funny and true Posted by: Bobsays
Hospitals Have Gone Green But the Green is the color of US Currency
Posted by: drricklippin on Mar 19, 2007 2:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Stacy Malkin;

Thanks for the piece and I welcome the rays of hope. :)

The danger of hospitals ranks up there as perhaps our number one U.S. cultural paradox. Another one is the health of U.S. health care workers

But I assure you hospitals using safer products etc is a "drop in the huge medical errors issue bucket"

The first thing the hospital industry needs to do is to realize that the predominant business model has been an abyssmal failure. As businesses hospitals will continue to cause harm.

Secondly hospitals need to redefine themselves as healing institutions- as much interested in caring as in curing.

Hospice provides the best model

Thanks and Be Well,

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton, Pa
http://medicalcrise.blogspot.com

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what I witnessed
Posted by: polanve on Mar 19, 2007 7:59 PM   
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as an employee of a local community hospital, I witnessed the abuse of the incinerator , which was routinely overloaded and produced billowing black smoke . Fortunately, it has been closed now. As an employee of a regional medical center, I'd befriended the radiation safety officer , who explained that after administration privatized the housekeeping staff , it became impossible to prevent radioactive waste from going out with the routine garbage. The regular employees who had been working for the hospital for up to 30 years new to call him when it in the radiation monitor alarms sounded . They were all laid off and outsourced . The private company replace them with low paid laborers who seldom stayed with the job long enough to learn what that alarm was really about. As a result, contaminated garbage went down the chute and off to the landfill with the regular trash.

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You go to a hospital and they strap you to pvc.
Posted by: greenskeeper on Mar 20, 2007 6:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's everywhere. The worst offender (even worse than the IV bag) was the id bracelet they put on me. If you didn't go into the hospital completely ill, you were certainly going to come out that way. I'm not exaggerating; the smell of the bracelet/pvc was so strong that it would give an immediate buzz. That's ridiculous.

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