The environmental footprint of health care: a global assessment
The University of Sydney · Research Institute for Humanity and Nature · +8 more institutions
Abstract
Health-care services are necessary for sustaining and improving human wellbeing, yet they have an environmental footprint that contributes to environment-related threats to human health. Previous studies have quantified the carbon emissions resulting from health care at a global level. We aimed to provide a global assessment of the wide-ranging environmental impacts of this sector.
In this multiregional input-output analysis, we evaluated the contribution of health-care sectors in driving environmental damage that in turn puts human health at risk. Using a global supply-chain database containing detailed information on health-care sectors, we quantified the direct and indirect supply-chain environmental damage driven by the demand for health care. We focused on seven environmental stressors with known adverse feedback cycles: greenhouse gas emissions, particulate matter, air pollutants (nitrogen oxides and sulphur dioxide), malaria risk, reactive nitrogen in water, and scarce water use.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 50.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
9- MLManfred Lenzen
The University of Sydney
- AMArunima MalikCorresponding
The University of Sydney
- MLMengyu Li
The University of Sydney
- JFJacob Fry
The University of Sydney, Research Institute for Humanity and Nature
- HWHelga Weisz
Leibniz Association, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Topics & keywords
- Health care
- Business
- Carbon footprint
- Greenhouse gas
- Global health
- Environmental health
- Supply chain
- Environmental resource management