Analysis of Sustainability in Hospital Laundry: The Social, Environmental, and Economic (Cost) Risks
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Hospital Laundry
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. HS Laundry Service
3.2. HE Laundry Service
3.3. HR Laundry Service
3.4. Unstructured Face-to-Face Interviews and Observations
4. Results
4.1. Social Risks
4.2. Environmental Risks
4.3. Economic Risks
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Number | Questions |
---|---|
I-1 | Employees’ receptiveness. |
I-2 | Training of all employees in the laundry process. |
I-3 | Absenteeism control in the laundry service. |
I-4 | The main reason for separation (clean and dirty). |
I-5 | Accident control in the laundry service. |
I-6 | Accidents working in the laundry service in the last year. |
I-7 | The number of accidents. |
I-8 | The main cause of accidents. |
I-9 | Employees’ complaints of pain or health problems. |
I-10 | Training of staff. |
I-11 | Requirement for the employees to use individual protection devices in the laundry process. |
I-12 | Current use of individual protection devices by the employees. |
I-13 | Risks in the laundry service. |
I-14 | Employees’ awareness about the risks of the laundry process. |
I-15 | The status of the devices (for example: new, in good working order, and old). |
I-16 | The accordance of the activities to the rules of the Brazilian National Health Surveillance Agency (ANVISA). |
I-17 | The laundry status of being clean and well marked. |
I-18 | The separation of the dirty area from the clean area. |
I-19 | Risks in the clean area. |
I-20 | Repetitiveness of the work. |
I-21 | Employees’ needs to raise a lot of weight compromising their posture. |
I-22 | Employees’ sense of proper use of chemicals. |
I-23 | Employees’ level of sustainable vision to reduce the sense of energy and water consumption. |
I-24 | Hospital concerns about the possible environmental risks of the activities. |
I-25 | The main environmental risks. |
I-26 | Hospital concerned about the sustainability. |
I-27 | Precautions taken by the hospital with regards to the environment. |
I-28 | The general remarks in loco that the observer judged to be important. |
Characteristics | HS | HE | HR |
---|---|---|---|
Number of beds | 234 | 136 | 120 |
Average kilograms of dirty laundry/bed | 3.0 kg/day | 2.5 kg/day | 2.3 kg/day |
Average kilograms of dirty laundry/month | 21,060 kg | 10,200 kg | 8280 kg |
Interviewed | Laundry Supervisor and Laundry Assistant | Laundry Supervisor and Laundry Assistant | Laundry Coordinator and Laundry Assistant |
Number of employees | 15 (Morning 6; Late 5; Night 4) | 12 (Morning 6; Late 6) | 8 (Morning 4; Late 4) |
Working shifts | Morning,late,night | Morning,late | Morning,late |
Number of visits | 1 visit morning shift with six employees, 220 min 1 visit morning shift with five employees each visit, 250 min 1 visit aftermoon shift with five employees, 205 min 1 visit aftermoon shift with four employees, 245 min | 1 visit morning shift with five employees each visit, 270 min 1 visit morning shift with five employees each visit, 230 min 1 visit aftermoon shift, four employees, 205 min 1 visit afternoon shift, whith three employees, 185 min | 1 visit morning shift with four employees each visit, 255 min 1 visit morning shift with four employees each visit, 150 min |
Issue | HS | HE | HR |
---|---|---|---|
I-1. | The employees showed no responsiveness and were unmotivated. | Yes, the staff were welcoming and attentive. | The employees showed no responsiveness. |
I-2. | Yes, the staff were trained, and had training annually. | Yes, employees were trained in activities and annually performed specific training. | It was observed that, when asked about risks, all employees responded evenly, which was a training highlight, as in recent weeks they had participated in a training that addressed the issue. |
I-3. | The supervisor reported that there was a high rate of absenteeism, not knowing numbers, but said usually one person was missing each, overloading the team too. | The human resources (HR) sector is controlling absenteeism. | The HR sector is controlling absenteeism. |
I-4. | Each year, the institution offers flu shots to employees, but due to high humidity in the dirty area and the high temperature in the clean area, employees are more likely to get sick. | There is clearance, but it is seasonal. In winter, there is the flu and colds, leading to muscle aches. | There is clearance, but it is seasonal. In winter, there is the flu and colds, leading to muscle aches. |
I-5. | Yes, the safety department controls this indicator. | The safety engineering sector controls accidents. | Yes, it is controlled by the HR department. |
I-6. | Yes. | Yes. | Last year, there was an accident with CAT (Work Accident Register), where an employee suffered a fall and broke his arm. |
I-7. | Cannot report the number. | Cannot report the number. | Cannot report the number. |
I-8. | The main reason is sharps, followed by fall. | There are employees who do physical therapy for tendinitis and bursitis and muscle strengthening. | The employee suffered a fall when he was collecting the blankets that were lying in the sun, hurting his leg and arm, but it was nothing serious. |
I-9. | Yes, employees complain of backache and arm aches. | Employees have muscle pain and had problems such as tendonitis. | Yes, 80% of employees have muscle aches. |
I-10. | I believe we are one step ahead of some health institutions, as for 10 years we are working with the focus on sustainability and waste management, such as modernization of equipment with less environmental risk (lower consumption of water and energy). | We have monthly training in various subjects. | We are concerned about the environment, and we know the effect that both the laundry and the hospital process can have on the environment and society. |
I-11. | Yes, all employees are instructed to use individual protection equipment necessary to carry out the activities. | Yes, all employees are instructed to use individual protection equipment necessary to carry out the activities. | Yes, all employees are instructed to use individual protection equipment necessary to carry out the activities. |
I-12. | The laundry staff have to use individual protection equipment such as boots, overalls, and caps; the gloves are optional, but encouraged in soiled areas. | The laundry staff use individual protection equipment such as boots, overalls, caps, and gloves. | Yes, some employees use individual protection equipment, but it was observed that most use only the boots and uniform. |
I-13. | There is knowledge that contamination by bodily fluids, sharps injuries, accidents with chemicals, and accidents such as falls due to slippery floor exist primarily in the dirty area. | Among the risks, they can cite the risk of fire, shock, contamination by bodily fluids, accidents with sharp piercing, accidents with chemicals, and also physical accidents such as falls. | There are risks but I think it is more due to contamination by chemical handling and ergonomics. |
I-14. | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. |
I-15. | The equipment has around 8 years of use; most are in good working order. | The place was renovated 3 years ago, acquiring more modern equipment. | The equipment is old with more than 10 years of use. It was observed that washing machines have water leakage. |
I-16. | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. |
I-17. | The laundry process is well structured and signposted, according to local regulations where there is a separation of the dirty and clean area. It was observed that there is too much moisture in place, and the floor used was not too rough, leading to the risk of falling. | The laundry process is well structured and signposted, according to local regulations where there is a separation of the dirty and clean area. It was observed that there is too much moisture in place, and water on the floor. The storage area was clean with a well-organized wardrobe. | The infrastructure is inadequate, complicating the operation. |
I-18. | Yes, there is a separation of areas as a standard. | Yes, there is separation of areas as a standard. | Yes, there is segregation of areas, but it is not according to the standard. |
I-19. | In the area, clean handling of the clothes between machines leaves us with pain in the arms and back pain due to poor posture, lifting heavy weights with repetitive movements. | A lot of weight, activity repetition, old machines. | At the end of the shift, we are physically exhausted, and we have pain in the legs, arms, and back due to extensive carrying of weight. |
I-20. | Some activities have repetitive work. | There is much activity that requires movement repetition, which may cause pain and muscle diseases. | Yes, there is repetitive work, particularly in the separation of activities, ironing and folding. |
I-21. | The dirty area is the most exhausting, because most of the wardrobe is difficult with wet handling. | The workload is well dimensioned and there are many helpful mechanisms. | There is a heavy workload on employees due to the low number of employees. |
I.22. | The employees take care in handling and use. There are meters that facilitate measuring quantities. | Yes, employees use correct chemicals. | Employees have experience in the correct use of chemicals. |
I-23. | Yes, we measure indicators in the use of water and energy. | Regarding the questions, employees were aligned, and expressed concern with the consumption of energy and water, but at the cost. | It was observed that employees try minimizing the use of water, energy, and chemicals due to the cost of operation. |
I-24. | The hospital controls all possible environmental risks. | The hospital is committed to reducing the possible environmental risk in the laundry sector and around the hospital. | In recent years, the hospital invested heavily in adaptation processes. The laundry was reformulated some twenty years ago; machinery was purchased as well as more modern and efficient equipment that consumes less water and electricity. |
I-25. | High water consumption, high energy consumption, smoke emission by boilers, generation of solid and liquid waste, and treatment and proper disposal of waste. | High energy consumption, high consumption of water, generation of solid and liquid waste, and treatment and proper disposal of waste, smoke emission by boilers. | Energy consumption, water consumption, solid and liquid waste, and treatment and proper disposal of waste. |
I-26. | I believe we are one step ahead of some health institutions, as for 10 years we are working with the focus on sustainability and waste management, such as modernization of equipment with less environmental risk (lower consumption of water and energy). | In my view, sustainability is promoting beneficial changes both internal and external. We used to have a high rate of internal work accidents, and several factors contributed to standards and standardization activities. Employees are happy because some issues were addressed in the root cause, such as the sharps being deposited after use in specific cases, and the accident rate due to this in the laundry sector dropped sharply. | Regarding sustainability, the institution is still in its infancy, when it comes to being sustainable, the focus is to reduce operating costs. Inside the laundry process, there is the issue of reducing costs, particularly energy and use of chemicals. |
I-27. | We are working on various projects such as waste separation, effluent treatment, greater control of escorts, generating administrative waste, selection of suppliers, among others. | Separation of waste, treatment of waste, proper disposal of waste. | Separation of waste, proper disposal of waste, control of energy consumption. |
I-28 | Regarding the questions, in some subjects, there were different opinions, but when analyzed, all groups came to a consensus. One of the longest-working employees reported that the laundry process improved over the past six years. | A new wastewater treatment system was introduced. The laundry process is old. | The coordinator stresses that the hospital is to cut costs due to a lack of government transfer. |
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Lopes, C.M.; Scavarda, A.J.; de Carvalho, M.N.M.; Vaccaro, G.; Korzenowski, A.L. Analysis of Sustainability in Hospital Laundry: The Social, Environmental, and Economic (Cost) Risks. Resources 2019, 8, 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010037
Lopes CM, Scavarda AJ, de Carvalho MNM, Vaccaro G, Korzenowski AL. Analysis of Sustainability in Hospital Laundry: The Social, Environmental, and Economic (Cost) Risks. Resources. 2019; 8(1):37. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010037
Chicago/Turabian StyleLopes, Catia Milena, Annibal José Scavarda, Mauricio Nunes Macedo de Carvalho, Guilherme Vaccaro, and André Luis Korzenowski. 2019. "Analysis of Sustainability in Hospital Laundry: The Social, Environmental, and Economic (Cost) Risks" Resources 8, no. 1: 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010037
APA StyleLopes, C. M., Scavarda, A. J., de Carvalho, M. N. M., Vaccaro, G., & Korzenowski, A. L. (2019). Analysis of Sustainability in Hospital Laundry: The Social, Environmental, and Economic (Cost) Risks. Resources, 8(1), 37. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources8010037