Abstract

Medical waste generated in healthcare facilities is categorized as hazardous due to its infectious, toxic, or radioactive properties, posing substantial risks to human health and the environment. This research proposes a bi-objective Mixed-Integer Linear Programming model for designing reverse logistics networks that enable both economical and safe medical waste management. Said model determines optimal quantity, depot locations, and routes for transporting waste from its generating points (hospitals) to the treatment and disposal sites (depots).This research addresses a bi-objective location routing problem, with multiple depots, time windows, capacity constraints, and variated waste types, across a multi-period horizon. It is innovative because no previous works have successfully dealt with such a combination of pragmatic features. The Location Routing Problem is an already well-known NP-Hard problem, with the additional aforementioned features further adding to its complexity. Thus, a genetic algorithm to solve large-sized realistic instances within reasonable computing times had been developed.Numerical experiments considered 20 random instances contrasting exact and approximate solution approaches. Also, a medical waste collection case study of a public hospital network in Atlántico Department, Colombia, delivering a Pareto frontier solution set, was introduced. The results demonstrated the efficacy of the proposed genetic algorithm in successfully addressing small instances of the problem, delivering outcomes comparable to the Mixed-Integer Linear Programming model. Furthermore, it yields good-quality solutions in a reduced computational time for larger instances deemed unfeasible for the Mixed-Integer Linear Programming model.This article contributes to both scientific literature and practitioners by presenting a decision-making tool designed to address the medical waste reverse logistics challenge under realistic scenarios. It approaches the issue from a bi-objective standpoint, jointly considering economic factors and biomedical safety. Additionally, the article introduces realistic and pertinent assumptions that have not been explored in previous literature.

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