The story of the Sambhavna Clinic, a non-profit holistic health clinic in Bhopal, India, built to treat those injured by the Union Carbide toxic gas release in 1984. enlarge video
HCWH's co-founder Gary Cohen is a recipient of the prestigious Skoll Award. This video, chronicling the evolution of HCWH's work, premiered at the 2009 Skoll World Forum. enlarge video
Hospital Policies
What Hospitals are Doing
Health care facilities around the world are reducing their use of hazardous chemicals and products. For example:
- More than 6,000 health care facilities in the U.S. are eliminating mercury-containing medical devices in favor of safer non-mercury alternatives
- Hospitals from Stockholm, to Prague, and throughout the U.S. are phasing out phthalate-containing PVC medical devices and switching to safer plastics
- Many hospitals are reducing pesticides by using integrated pest management techniques
- Many hospitals are choosing safer, less toxic building materials for new construction and renovation projects.
High-priority chemicals and materials include:
- Mercury
- PVC (vinyl plastic) and phthalates
- Brominated flame retardants
- Glutaraldehyde and ethylene oxide
- Pesticides
- Volatile organic compounds in building materials
- Hazardous ingredients in cleaning products
What You Can Do
To address this problem in a comprehensive way, leading health care companies are creating internal chemical policies to avoid the worst chemicals and to address the problem of untested chemicals in products.
Kaiser Permanente, the largest non-profit health system in the U.S., has a policy to avoid chemicals linked to cancer, reproductive problems and genetic mutation, and asks its vendors about toxicity testing of chemicals used in products. System-wide policies guide hospitals in their purchasing decisions.
For information, examples, and guidance for your health care facility, see Comprehensive Chemicals Policy in Health Care: An Implementation Guide. (pdf)
While the health care sector can do its part to reduce people's exposure to hazardous chemicals, government policies must also be reformed. See State and Federal Policies section.
Key Resources
- Joint letter to the Ministers of the Competitiveness Council: mplementation of the Europe2020 Strategy (pdf)
- European NGOs letter to European Commission reacting on mandate given to European Food Safety Authority to set EDCs crieteria (pdf)
- Request clarification: European Commission to prepare a scientific opinion on the human health and environmental risks of endocrine disruptors (pdf)
- Chemical Policy Principles: Letter to Obama Administration
- Europe's Rules Forcing US Firms to Clean Up
Unwilling to surrender sales, companies struggle to meet the EU's tough stand on toxics (LA Times article) - Healthy Business Strategies for Transforming the Toxic Chemical Economy (pdf)
- REACH (Registration, Evaluation and Authorization of Chemicals)
Learn about EU's REACH Law - Requirements for the Regulation of Chemicals with Endocrine Disrupting Properties (pdf)
- Sustainable Hospital Project
database of alternatives - What does Chemical Contamination Cost Health Care? download pdf or view web presentation

