Modeled Carbon Footprint of Change of Sterile Gloves and Instruments for Abdominal Wound Closure
Virginia Ledda, Adesoji Ademuyiwa, Adewale Adisa, Aneel Bhangu, Dhruv Ghosh, Parvez David Haque, J. C. Allen Ingabire, Faustin Ntirenganya, Maria Picciochi, Atul Suroy, Robert Lillywhite, Dmitri Nepogodiev

TL;DR
Changing sterile gloves and instruments before closing abdominal wounds reduces carbon emissions, especially in low- and middle-income countries.
Contribution
A decision analytic model quantifies the carbon footprint reduction of changing gloves and instruments in abdominal surgeries.
Findings
Changing gloves and instruments reduced carbon footprint by 10.97 kgCO2e in clean-contaminated surgeries in lower- and middle-income countries.
In high-income countries, the reduction was 4.14 kgCO2e for clean-contaminated surgeries.
The intervention consistently lowered carbon emissions across all country income levels.
Abstract
What is the global carbon footprint of changing sterile gloves and instruments before closure of clean-contaminated and contaminated-dirty abdominal wounds? This decision analytic model showed that, in the base case scenario in lower- and middle-income countries, changing gloves and instruments was associated with a reduction in the wound-specific carbon footprint of 10.97 kg CO2 equivalents (kgCO2e) in clean-contaminated surgeries and of 22.60 kgCO2e in contaminated-dirty surgeries. In high-income countries in the best-case scenario, reductions were 4.14 kgCO2e and 10.48 kgCO2e, respectively. This model demonstrates an overall net reduction in carbon emissions with the change of sterile gloves and instruments, supporting its adoption in surgical practice. This decision analytical model study evaluates the association of changing sterilized gloves and instruments in surgery with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAbdominal Surgery and Complications · Climate Change and Health Impacts · Surgical site infection prevention
