Kapiti Observer

DHB tackles waste mountain

- RACHEL THOMAS

In the muggy basement of Wellington Hospital, between the pipes and the plumbing, two people in contaminat­ion suits have been sorting through mountains of rubbish.

Syringes and human offcuts, or related gore, are nowhere in sight as bags of general rubbish are slung on to a sorting table in an effort by the capital’s district health board to address its waste.

‘‘There are no body parts ... and there’s no way we should be dealing with anything that’s soaked,’’ according to Thom Adams, lead educator for The Sustainabi­lity Trust.

These things are a health hazard and must be shipped off to Brisbane in refrigerat­ion containers and destroyed in an incinerato­r, under order of the Environmen­tal Protection Authority.

Capital & Coast DHB (CCDHB) generates

‘‘Making the default to recycle instead of throwing something away - it's a behaviour change.’’

between 4000 and 5000 kilograms of waste every day. That includes biohazardo­us materials, recyclable materials and general waste.

Valentino Luna, the health board’s sustainabi­lity officer, said a lot of hospital waste is subject to health and safety protocols and cannot be helped.

But there may be room for improvemen­t around recycling packaging, or dealing with food waste.

This audit marks the first time the health board has done a stocktake of its waste.

Adams and his co-worker, Deepa-Rose Sealy, have been undergroun­d at the hospital for six days.

For surgeons dealing with critical situations, it is understand­able if their first priority is not taking a moment to recycle, Luna said.

‘‘We have a workforce that is here to look after people’s health.

‘‘They are very time poor ... [for example] the emergency department - trying to deal with life or death situations - getting into their habits to recycle, it takes a bit of time. Making the default to recycle instead of throwing something away - it’s a behaviour change.’’

Two months ago the health board began recycling plastic bags from intravenou­s treatments, such as saline, glucose and iron. They are being trucked to Otaki and recycled into equipment used in children’s playground­s, Luna said.

The health board goes through about 300,000 of these bags a year. About 500kg of plastic has been diverted from landfill already.

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