manchesterwired
Health
Are you willing to swallow a recycled pill?
Published: 2nd Mar 2012 03:20:45
The NHS needs to save £20bn, so making ends meet is going to be tricky and big changes will be needed.
In this week's Scrubbing Up, Dr David Pencheon, director of the national NHS Sustainable Development Unit, says recycling medicine could be part of the answer.
The cuts facing the NHS are like you or I losing around 20% of our salary over the next three years - while trying to lead the same sort of lifestyle.
We'd have to make some big changes. And that's exactly what the NHS will have to do, particularly if it wants to keep improving the quality of patient care.
So what can it do? One positive change is for the NHS to become more sustainable, not just financially but also environmentally.
It's not difficult to be sustainable. In fact, at home it's quite natural. We recycle, we don't leave the taps running needlessly, we don't leave the TV, radio and the lights on when we go to work, or even when we pop out to get the paper from the newsagents.
We also don't throw away a packet of headache pills just because they have been opened.
But yet, when we go to work it can be a different story, with lights left on, windows opened rather than thermostats turned down and medicines wasted and put in the bin.
NHS staff are no more wasteful than anybody else. But working in a high-pressure environment where lives can be on the line often means that waste isn't always at the top of the agenda.
Recently, we commissioned research looking at ways of saving carbon, as well as money, across the NHS in England.
Sustainability must become core to the way the NHS operates”
The results showed that energy efficiency with improved heating and lighting controls was one important way of saving cash, more than £7m a year.
However, the biggest financial and carbon savings came from reducing drugs wastage.
An estimated £300m of medicines are wasted each year in England, but around £89m could be saved by making a 2.5% reduction in medicines wastage.
That's a big saving. Of course we have to ensure the drugs are safe to be reused. But these problems can be solved.
The issue is not so much how we reuse drugs but rather whether the public want us to do it.
Are they willing to swallow the pill - in this instance a recycled pill?
When we polled 1,000 people, we found 52% would be likely to take pills that had been returned unused by other patients and checked for safety, while only 19% said they would be very unlikely to do so.
Combining financial sustainability with environmental sustainability is a win-win situation.
The carbon footprint of manufactured drugs, which are often shipped from the other side of the world, is huge - if these drugs can be recycled then so much the better.
In addition, medicines should be prescribed for shorter periods of times so people have fewer unused medicines in their cabinets, and we must put greater efforts into preventing illness rather than always worrying about curing it.
Most people prefer to be healthy and not have to go to hospital or see their GP.
So if the NHS spent more resources on illness prevention for diabetes, obesity, cancer and heart disease then less people would end up needing drugs.
That's better for the NHS and better for the public.
However, until we are in that position we need to consider other ways of making the NHS more sustainable.
The fact that the public are thinking more positively about recycling medicines should be welcomed. It shows that people have a great deal of faith in their health service, despite headlines to the contrary, and that they want to help the NHS become more cost effective and more sustainable.
Sustainability therefore must become core to the way the NHS operates and be part of every decision making process if it is to be truly fit for the future.
Harvard Citation
BBC News, 2012. Are you willing to swallow a recycled pill?. [Online] (Updated 02 Mar 2012)Available at: http://www.manchesterwired.co.uk/news.php/1415304-Are-you-willing-to-swallow-a-recycled-pill [Accessed 14th June 2013]
Latest News
-
At 06:19:37 in Other
PC Fiona Bone: Father says she 'was always on the go'
Murdered PC Fiona Bone was "a lovely, bubbly person" who was always looking for her next challenge, according to her father, Paul.... -
At 06:18:12 in Other
PC Nicola Hughes: Father recalls 'wicked sense of humour'
The father of murdered PC Nicola Hughes said once his daughter had decided to become a police officer, he knew she would never change her mi... -
At 06:05:15 in Other
Dale Cregan: Court convoy risked lives says PCC
The lives of police and public were risked by Dale Cregan's daily trip from jail to court, Greater Manchester's Police and Crime C... -
At 05:43:47 in Headlines
Newspaper review: Bank ousting sparks strong views
The ousting of Stephen Hester from the Royal Bank of Scotland has provoked some forthright comment.... -
At 05:05:32 in Other
Hand grenades 'rare - but they're out there'
Dale Cregan's killings of David Short and PCs Nicola Hughes and Fiona Bone are the first time hand grenades have been used as murder we... -
At 04:04:38 in Headlines
Eight radical solutions to the problem of dog mess
It's a problem that gets on lots of people's nerves - the scourge of dog owners who don't clear up after their pets. So, what... -
At 00:40:14 in Other
Chancellor George Osborne sent science museum cuts letter
Council leaders representing 11 local authorities have sent a letter to the Chancellor expressing concern over potential cuts to museums in ... -
At 19:32:36 in Other
Dale Cregan trial: Police killer sentenced to whole of life in jail
Dale Cregan will spend the rest of his life in jail for four murders, including those of two police officers in Greater Manchester.... -
At 18:30:53 in Other
M62 hen party crash: Minibus driver arrested
The driver of a minibus carrying a hen party which was involved in a fatal collision on the M62 has been arrested.... -
At 17:20:27 in Other
Profile: Moors Murderer Ian Brady
Moors Murderer Ian Brady wants to be allowed to die....
News In Other Categories
-
Footballer Lionel Messi investigated for tax fraud in Spain
Barcelona footballer Lionel Messi and his father are being investigated in Spain for allegedly defrauding the state of more than 4m euros (£... -
US announces safety grant for Bangladesh factories
The US has said it will provide grants to help improve safety standards in Bangladesh garment factories.... -
Townshend and Daltrey: Quadrophenia's enduring relevance
The Who are back on stage in the UK touring a full-length performance of their classic 70s album, Quadrophenia. Its story belongs to a very ... -
Inside Facebook's green and clean arctic data centre
You've probably never thought about the electricity consumed by those Google searches, Facebook updates and all the other things you do... -
Banned pesticides may be having wider environmental impacts
A new report indicates that a class of pesticides linked to the deaths of bees may be harming other wildlife species. ... -
David Cameron promises £1m for 'big ideas'
David Cameron is to offer a £1m payment to anyone who can "identify and solve the biggest problem of our time"....



