World

Scotland becomes first country to ban climate-harming anaesthetic

Removing it from hospitals saves emissions equivalent to powering 1,700 homes every year, govt says

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 04 Mar 2023 6:00PM

Scotland becomes first country to ban climate-harming anaesthetic
Scotland’s National Health Service has set a target to be net-zero for anaesthetic gases by 2027, and the removal of desflurane is the first step toward its goal. – Wikipedia pic, March 4, 2023

LONDON – Scotland has become the first country in the world to ban the use of the anaesthetic desflurane due to its harmful impact on the environment, Anadolu Agency reported.

“Desflurane, used as an anaesthetic during the surgery, has a global warming potential 2,500 times greater than carbon dioxide,” the Scottish government said in a statement.

“Removing it from use in hospital theatres across NHS Scotland saves emissions equivalent to powering 1,700 homes every year,” it added.

Meanwhile, more than 40 hospital trusts in England and a number of hospitals in Wales are cutting down the usage.

The work was led by clinicians who have moved away from using desflurane to clinically appropriate and safe alternatives with less environmental impact.

Scottish Health and Social Care Cabinet Secretary Humza Yousaf said: “I am immensely proud that we have become the first nation in the UK to stop using environmentally harmful anaesthetics in our NHS.”

“Programmes like this are key to our transition to becoming a net-zero health service while ensuring patient safety remains at the heart of every clinical decision,” he added.

Kenneth Barker, clinical lead for the National Green Theatres Programme, also commented on the issue, saying: “Theatres are high carbon and energy-intensive areas that produce high volumes of waste, so reducing the environmental impact of theatres will make a positive difference towards achieving Scotland’s net-zero targets.”

“NHS Scotland has assigned an ambitious target to be net-zero for anaesthetic gases by 2027, and the removal of desflurane is just the first step towards this,” he added. – Bernama, March 4, 2023

Related News

Malaysia / 2mth

King drives over 45km to inspect environment in Mersing

Malaysia / 4mth

Do not turn a blind eye to environmental issues, cautions former minister

Our Planet / 6mth

Green activist urges hotels to adopt Asean Green Ratings

Malaysia / 1y

Sabah native activist slams Tongod cement plant as ‘economically and environmentally unsound’

Culture & Lifestyle / 1y

Devotees to annual Cheng Beng festival in Penang urged to be more environmentally friendly

Opinion / 1y

Do the maths, ban E-waste importation to Malaysia

Spotlight

Business

Tycoon Vincent Tan trims BCorp stake further in RM115m share sale

Malaysia

UMNO’s solo gamble in Johor: A show of strength or risky miscalculation?

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Nik Aziz’s grandson allegedly slapped by senator: Father ready to take case to court

Malaysia

Lorry driver jailed a day, fined for making obscene gestures, dangerous driving (video)

Malaysia

PKR leader defends MyKhas access suspension for PJ, Subang MPs, cites ‘political choices’

Opinion

Social media set to dominate Johor polls as election kingmaker

Malaysia

Man charged in Butterworth parang attack case that left victim fearing permanent disability

Malaysia

Teen mothers must return to school, says Fadhlina as education remains priority

Malaysia

Penang water tariffs to increase from July 1 after year-long deferment

You may be interested

World

Cambodia turns to UN conciliation to resolve Thailand maritime dispute over offshore energy resources

World

Trump proposes new tariffs on 60 economies over forced labour concerns, Malaysia included

World

Does Iran have nukes?

World

Thaksin to receive full freedom under royal pardon as Thailand ends remaining sentence

World

Trump admits calling Netanyahu “crazy” as US pushes for broader Middle East ceasefire

World

Gulf conflict reignites as missile attacks strike Kuwait, diplomatic breakthrough remains elusive

World

Israel-Lebanon ceasefire offers hope for wider Iran peace deal as regional violence persists