Alison Arnold says that sustainable healthcare is no longer a “nice to have” – it’s an essential part of delivering safe, cost-effective and responsible services. In this article, she discusses the way forward.
Sterile Services Departments (SSDs) sit at the heart of infection prevention and patient safety, but they also face growing pressure to cut waste, reduce environmental impact and support NHS Net Zero targets. The question is: how can SSDs go greener without compromising compliance, quality or safety?
Healthcare's environmental footprint is significant, and decontamination is one of the most resource-intensive areas. SSDs consume water, energy, chemicals and packaging on a vast scale, and every reprocessed instrument carries both an environmental and financial cost. Pressure is growing for SSDs to address this impact. The NHS has committed to Net Zero, and similar pledges exist worldwide. Yet departments can't reduce their standards. Every tray must be cleaned, disinfected and sterilised with absolute reliability. Any solution has to preserve compliance while reducing environmental impact.
Sustainability and safety aren't opposing forces. Smarter products, better processes and improved education can reduce waste and carbon while strengthening patient safety.
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