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Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Financial and environmental costs of manual versus automated control of end-tidal gas concentrations

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Tay S, Weinberg L, Peyton P, Story D, Briedis J
2013
Anaesthesia and Intensive Care. 41 (1): 95-101

Emerging technologies that reduce the economic and environmental costs of anaesthesia have had limited assessment. We hypothesised that automated control of end-tidal gases, a new feature in anaesthesia machines, will consistently reduce volatile agent consumption cost and greenhouse gas emissions. As part of the planned replacement of anaesthesia machines in a tertiary hospital, we performed a prospective before and after study comparing the cost and greenhouse gas emissions of isoflurane, sevoflurane and desflurane when using manual versus automated control of end-tidal gases. We analysed 3675 general anaesthesia cases with inhalational agents: 1865 using manual control and 1810 using automated control. Volatile agent cost was $18.87/hour using manual control and $13.82/hour using automated control: mean decrease $5.05/hour (95% confidence interval: $0.88-9.22/hour, P=0.0243). The 100-year global warming potential decreased from 23.2 kg/hour of carbon dioxide equivalents to 13.0 kg/hour: mean decrease 10.2 kg/hour (95% confidence interval: 2.7-17.7 kg/hour, P=0.0179). Automated control reduced costs by 27%. Greenhouse gas emissions decreased by 44%, a greater than expected decrease facilitated by a proportional reduction in desflurane use. Automated control of end-tidal gases increases participation in low flow anaesthesia with economic and environmental benefits.

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Resource Description

    General Geographic Feature
    Non-United States
    • Non-United States: Australasia
    General Health Impact
    Research Article
    Health Sector Influence, Mitigation
    • Health Sector Influence, Mitigation : Mitigation Co-Benefit/Co-Harm
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