A 2021 study conducted by the Fraunhofer Institute for Environmental, Safety, and Energy Technology (Fraunhofer) analyzed the environmental impacts of the medical remanufacturing of Electrophysiology Catheters. By using reprocessed catheters as an alternative to newly manufactured ones, the study revealed they reduced global warming impact by 50% and ozone depletion by 90%. The use of abiotic resources like water, sunlight and minerals, also decreased by 29%.
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[British Journal of Surgery, Volume 108, Issue 7, July 2021, Pages 737–739] Reprocessing Supports Net-Zero Carbon Surgery goals for hospitals. Read more…
Reprocessing significantly reduces medical waste tonnage plaguing America’s landfills – Reprocessors helped hospitals and surgical centers divert 11,964,160 pounds of medical waste […]
[McKinsey & Company] Circularity refers to practices that optimize resource use and minimize waste across the entire production and consumption cycle, emphasizing […]