Preventing tibial fracture infections may cut CO2 by 1025 kg per case
This meta-analysis assessed the potential environmental benefits of preventing tibial fracture-related infections (FRIs). The study modeled greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, water use, and waste generated per prevented FRI among patients undergoing surgical treatment for tibial fractures. The analysis found that preventing one FRI could reduce GHG emissions by 1025.3 kg CO2, save 1778.6 m3 of water, and reduce waste by 79.4 kg. These figures are derived from an environmental model informed by a systematic review and meta-analysis, and uncertainty was not quantified. The authors note that the model is based on associations between FRI and resource use, and causality is not established. Limitations were not reported. While the findings suggest that interventions to reduce tibial FRIs may contribute to environmental sustainability, the results should be interpreted cautiously and not extrapolated to other fracture types or settings. The practice relevance is that preventing tibial FRIs may reduce environmental impact, but clinical outcomes beyond environmental savings are not addressed.