Plastic Waste and COVID-19 Incidence Among Hospital Staff After Deescalation in PPE Use

个人防护装备使用量减少后,医院工作人员中塑料垃圾与新冠肺炎感染率的关系

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Abstract

IMPORTANCE: In September 2023, the Singapore Ministry of Health revised the national personal protective equipment (PPE) guideline for health care personnel (HCP) attending to suspected or confirmed patients with COVID-19, recommending the use of N95 respirators alone. However, data on the associations between PPE deescalation, staff COVID-19 incidence, and sustainability outcomes are limited. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the associations between PPE deescalation guidelines on staff COVID-19 incidence and the environmental sustainability outcomes of the measure. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a retrospective quality improvement study of hospital PPE usage using data from Tan Tock Seng Hospital and the National Centre for Infectious Diseases (NCID), analyzing monthly COVID-19 incidence rates among HCP (all medical staff, allied health care workers, ancillary staff, and administrative staff from the hospital campus) and in the community over 12 months before and after PPE deescalation measures (October 2021 to September 2022 and October 2022 to September 2023). MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: COVID-19 incidence rates among HCP and in the community; economic and environmental outcomes of removing single-use gowns from routine COVID-19 care, including reductions in carbon footprint, plastic waste generation, and cost savings. RESULTS: The mean (SD) monthly number of HCP was 10 774 (79) (range, 10 636-10 891) preimplementation and 11 099 (200) (range, 10 864-11 449) postimplementation. Our analysis revealed PPE deescalation was not associated with an increase in monthly COVID-19 infections among hospital staff, with the trends aligning with population infection rates. The median (IQR) staff COVID-19 infection rate relative to the community COVID-19 infection rate was 2.6 (1.9-3.6) preimplementation compared with 1.5 (0.9-3.1) postimplementation. An estimated 4 gowns per patient-day were saved, totaling 440 532 gowns over 12 months. This equated to an estimated reduction in health care costs by SGD 453 748 (approximately USD 333 970) and reductions of 398 681.46 kg carbon dioxide equivalent in carbon emissions and 66 080 kg of plastic waste. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This quality improvement study of hospital PPE usage observed that the national PPE deescalation guidelines corresponded with the reductions in protective gown use, associated costs, carbon footprint, and plastic waste generation with no apparent compromise to staff safety and health.

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