Abstract Background The Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) is a cornerstone of geriatric medicine and is frequently carried out in integrated care clinics using a paper document (1). The expansion of integrated care services occurs alongside climate change, an increasingly challenging public health crisis at a local and national level (2). Paper waste is a contributor to deforestation and carbon emissions. We aimed to assess the environmental impact of paper use within our geriatric integrated care service. Methods 12 months of Geriatric Integrated Care attendances were included between 1st January 2023 to 1st January 2024. We measured the number of CGAs performed and A4 pages used in documentation. Environmental impact was evaluated based on carbon emissions per A4 page (3). Results A CGA was completed on 780 patients in a 12-month period which included in-hospital, frailty at the front door and 2 community specialist teams' assessments. This resulted in 11,700 pages of A4 paper in documentation. Estimated carbon emissions are 70.2kg CO2 emissions for the 12-month period. Extrapolating this solely to the 32 ICPOP teams in geriatric medicine in Ireland it would result in the equivalent of 22 trees per year, emitting 1,123.2 Kg of CO2 emissions per year from these assessments alone or equivalent to driving 8028.6km (4). Conclusion The benefits for patients and staff of integrated digital healthcare records are well established. The environmental impact of how we provide healthcare is not. Paperless solutions are required for both patient safety, seamless record keeping and environmental sustainability in keeping with UN sustainable development goals.