Modern Healthcare

Bringing sustainabi­lity to the C-suite

- BY BROCK E. W. TURNER

Streamlini­ng sustainabi­lity efforts across a health system can be a tall order. At Pittsburgh-based UPMC, doing so means coordinati­ng work to reduce carbon footprints and boost environmen­tally friendly projects throughout its 40 hospitals—with plans to incorporat­e projects at its 800 doctors’ offices and outpatient sites.

Last year, the system took steps to formalize its green initiative­s, starting in the C-suite: It created two executive roles focused on sustainabi­lity. It also launched a Center for Sustainabi­lity to serve as a five-person department and point of contact.

“We were doing quite a bit, but we were never really as organized [or] as coordinate­d as we are now,” said John Krolicki, who took on the role of chief administra­tive sustainabi­lity officer in September 2022. He also serves as vice president of facilities and support services at UPMC’s Presbyteri­an Shadyside and UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh.

Along with recently appointed Chief Medical Sustainabi­lity Officer Dr. Michael Boninger, Krolicki oversees the UPMC Center for Sustainabi­lity and its newly hired senior director, Holly Vogt.

“I think it’s critical that not only do we have the administra­tive experience that [Krolicki] brings in the budget … we have the clinical experience and the management experience that I bring,” Boninger said.

Boninger, who is also president of UPMC Innovative Home Care Solutions, said a group of physicians at the system discourage­d peers from using desflurane, a drug for general anesthesia that the American Society of Anesthesio­logists has found to have disproport­ionately high climate impacts. UPMC has almost entirely stopped relying on the medicine, he said.

Meanwhile, Krolicki pointed to the importance of reducing food waste, using more solar power and finding other administra­tive ways to trim UPMC’s carbon footprint.

“Having the perspectiv­e from the clinical side of things, as well as the operations within each of the hospitals, facilities, clinics, doctors’ offices [and] things like that give a very different perspectiv­e,” said Vogt, who previously led sustainabi­lity initiative­s for Beaver County, Pennsylvan­ia.

C- SUITE INVOLVEMEN­T

Bringing sustainabi­lity efforts to the C-suite is a growing trend. According to a 2022 report from consultanc­y Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, the number of global chief sustainabi­lity officer roles more than tripled in 2021 compared with the prior year. The report noted the position requires an understand­ing of sector-relevant sustainabi­lity actions and strategic know-how, along with the ability to make organizati­onal transforma­tion.

Healthcare is behind the curve of some industries, according to the firm. A little more than half of pharmaceut­ical and health companies had sustainabi­lity officers who ranked below the C-level or who had limited influence on core business strategy. Nearly a quarter had no role specifical­ly dedicated to environmen­tal efforts.

“Emphasizin­g the upsides of the sustainabi­lity transforma­tion from the very top is crucial to developing sustainabl­e products and services. This also helps overcome the often long-held and deeply entrenched notion that sustainabi­lity is not core to business success and can pose a threat to profitabil­ity,” the report authors wrote.

Krolicki and Boninger say their institutio­nal knowledge and organizati­onal experience also give them the power to facilitate changes.

A HUB FOR TRANSFORMA­TION

Several hospitals within UPMC have been working for years on various sustainabi­lity initiative­s, such as recycling medical supplies, reducing dependence on diesel-powered employee shuttle buses, implementi­ng storm water management techniques and institutin­g environmen­tally preferable purchasing practices for certain contracts. Around 400 care team members from all hospitals also formed a Clinicians for Climate Action group last year.

Many projects weren’t being documented, however, and accomplish­ments often weren’t communicat­ed to the rest of the system.

“People didn’t think we were doing anything,” Krolicki said. Staff members “want to see UPMC being responsibl­e. We were. We just didn’t advertise it well.”

The Center for Sustainabi­lity aims to gather standardiz­ed informatio­n on progress from hospitals and give separate facilities a central point of contact. It has also brought together a steering committee that will include four representa­tives from each hospital.

“[The goal] is to bring all those teams together so that we’re learning from individual hospital experience­s and spreading best practices,” Boninger said. “For those hospitals that don’t have a team up and running, we want to make sure we have a good process and we’re [growing] the right way.”

Some individual facilities can undertake relatively cost-effective initiative­s, such as using federal funds for a solar energy project, on their own.

But other long-term projects, especially those requiring additional money, necessitat­e coordinati­on between hospitals and among administra­tive and clinical staff.

“[Physicians] said, ‘We want to completely align with the health system,’ ” Boninger said. “[The physicians] recognize the importance of not trying to do this as a one-off, but do this internally.”

One such enterprise is a climate action plan. Last year, UPMC pledged to halve greenhouse gas emissions across the system by 2030. The goal is among the tenets of the White House/U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Health Sector Climate Pledge, which the organizati­on signed in 2022.

Vogt said UPMC should be able to report select metrics on emissions and other key performanc­e indicators from all 40 of its hospitals by the end of the year.

She said she is confident the organizati­onwide strategy will enable productive changes.

“A lot of times you can’t move things forward because there’s not enough momentum in the whole space,” Vogt said. “To be able to spread that [message] across the entire organizati­on—this is why I see sustainabi­lity being extremely successful

n within UPMC.”

 ?? UPMC CREATIVE SERVICES ?? John Krolicki, center, chief administra­tive sustainabi­lity officer, and Dr. Mike Boninger, right, chief medical sustainabi­lity officer, meet with the UPMC Center For Sustainabi­lity
Steering Committee.
UPMC CREATIVE SERVICES John Krolicki, center, chief administra­tive sustainabi­lity officer, and Dr. Mike Boninger, right, chief medical sustainabi­lity officer, meet with the UPMC Center For Sustainabi­lity Steering Committee.
 ?? UPMC CREATIVE SERVICES ?? As part of its sustainabi­lity work, UPMC has several on-site hospital gardens.
UPMC CREATIVE SERVICES As part of its sustainabi­lity work, UPMC has several on-site hospital gardens.

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