Authors
Susanne Koch, Federico Bilotta, Luca Brazzi, Anna Marie Camilleri Podesta, Moisés Canle, Edoardo De Robertis, Sebastian Gibb, Patricio Gonzalez-Pizarro, Philip Henderson, Vivian H Y Ip, Susanne Jöbges, Peter Kranke, Janett Kreutziger, Paul McConnell, Victoria Metaxa, Giorgia Montrucchio, Jane Muret, Sabine Pecher, Carolina S Romero, Nicolaas H Sperna Weiland, Andrea Tomassi, Alexandra Trinks, Wolfgang Buhre, Sustainability National Representatives.
Published in
European journal of anaesthesiology. Jul 06, 2026. Epub Jul 06, 2026.
Abstract
Due to the continued use of fossil fuels and other chemical pollutants, atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations and environmental pollution continue to rise. The health sector is both a driver and a victim of these developments, and intensive care medicine (ICM), with its high energy demands, extensive use of disposable products, and large variety of pharmaceuticals, contributes substantially to the climate crisis and environmental degradation. The European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care (ESAIC) therefore aimed to develop consensus recommendations to reduce the environmental footprint of ICM across Europe. A total of 37 recommendations were initially drafted by four topic groups (1) energy, (2) waste management, (3) medication, and (4) ethics-each composed of three to five experts. To facilitate implementation in both middle- and high-income European countries, the agreement threshold was set at 80%. The recommendations were validated by 37 experts from 20 countries using a two-step Delphi procedure. In the first round, all recommendations reached at least 75% agreement. After amendments to four recommendations based on expert feedback, all achieved over 80% approval in the second round, with 32 receiving more than 90% agreement. The final recommendations address: (1) a complete transition to renewable energy and implementation of energy-saving strategies; (2) optimisation of procurement in clinical processes (10Rs) and waste management solutions for single-use plastics; (3) reduction of greenhouse gas emissions (mainly fluorinated gases) and water toxicity caused by medications, as well as prevention of a further increase in antimicrobial resistance (AMR); and (4) implementation of an environment-related, ethically guided precautionary principle. This ESAIC consensus provides a practical framework for sustainable ICM. Stakeholders at all levels should now introduce these recommendations through institutional policies, procurement criteria, guidelines and quality improvement programmes to align intensive care practice with planetary health goals.
PMID:
42397698
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 03 Jul 2026.
Read full publication at:
Please sign in
to see all details.
Advertisement
Stats
- Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
- Views 11
- Comments 0