Abstract

e19128 Background: Hospital waste management is a current sustainability challenge. The proper waste separation is principally recommended in most protocols, despite not always performed. Potentially infectious, sharp and chemical residues must be properly incinerated. Incineration increases the cost of waste management and releases hazardous gases into the atmosphere, such as dioxins. Dioxins are extremely stable compounds with an estimated half-life of 7 to 9 years in humans. As an important compound of air pollution, they have been classified as a class I human carcinogen by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. The dioxin carcinogenicity evolves action on transcriptional activation and inhibition of apoptosis. A higher serum concentration of dioxins is found in individuals who live near incinerators or who consume food produced near them.Furthermore, studies showed a 3 to 4 times higher risk of developing cancer in inhabitants of the neighborhood of waste incinerators and an association of serum concentration of dioxins and mortality from different types of cancer. Some neoplasms related to this exposure are lung cancer, soft tissue sarcomas and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. Methods: We present the impact of adequate division of medical waste from an institution in the Federal District - Brazil with data collected for 8 years. The residues were separated into two groups, the first being formed of residues that should be incinerated (potentially infectious, sharps and chemicals); and the second for regular garbage, which could be recyclable or non-recyclable. Results: By training the team and establishing appropriate protocols for proper segregation of materials, we achieved a saving of 66% from what would have been incinerated waste, equivalent to 76 tons, of which 71.9 tons correspond to recyclable waste. Also, the incineration cost was five times higher than the adequate disposal of regular waste. If the waste separation protocol had not been implemented, the biohazardous and chemical material would have contaminated the rest of the residues, making incineration as a final destination mandatory for all the waste, resulting in the release of more gases after incineration and a 64% higher cost. Conclusions: Despite the barriers to the classification of residues such as non-standardization and inadequate training of hospital teams, this low-cost implementation procedures significantly reduces the cost of waste management and the air release of human carcinogens.

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