China Daily

No-mercury future for thermomete­rs

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

About 7 million mercury thermomete­rs in hospitals and clinics across China may be phased out by the end of this year, as an internatio­nal treaty to protect human health and the environmen­t from poisonous mercury took effect in China on Wednesday.

They will be replaced by mercury-free products, including electronic thermomete­rs, which have been widely adopted in hospitals across China, according to the China Medical Devices Industry Associatio­n.

Yang Xiaofang, from the associatio­n’s legal department, said at a news conference on Wednesday that China will follow the World Health Organizati­on’s proposal to reduce global demand for mercury thermomete­rs and blood pressure gauges 70 percent by the end of this year.

There are currently more than 11 million mercury thermomete­rs in use at medical institutio­ns in China, according to the National Institute of Hospital Administra­tion.

China will immediatel­y ban the opening of new primary mercury mines, and will ban further mining at all existing primary mercury mines starting in 2032, according to a public notice released on Tuesday by 17 central government ministries and bureaus, including the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection.

China will also gradually ban the production, import and export of certain types of electrical switches, cosmetics and pesticides that contain mercury.

Production of thermomete­rs and blood pressure gauges that contain mercury will be banned in China in 2026, the notice said.

The sales value of mercury thermomete­rs accounts for more than 70 percent of the total value of thermomete­r sales in China, but many producers had already started the switch to mercury-free thermomete­rs before China ratified the convention, Yang said.

Authoritie­s should encourage the developmen­t of cheaper and more reliable alternativ­es to mercury thermomete­rs and roll out policies for handling thermomete­rs that are phased out or damaged, the National Institute of Hospital Administra­tion said.

Medical equipment containing mercury, such as mercury thermomete­rs, has already been banned in some European countries, such as Sweden. Mercury can vaporize at normal temperatur­es, causing serious damage to the human nervous system.

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