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
Contact: Eileen Secrest 540-479-0168
Nurses Go to Washington!
Washington, DC — There’s nothing more important to nurses than their family, patients, and communities. Recently, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Clean Air Act have been under attack from some members of Congress who have put protecting polluters ahead of protecting public health!
And that’s why, this week, Health Care Without Harm Nurse Advocates headed to Washington, DC to meet with members of Congress and White House Staff to tell them that any action by Congress to block the EPA from updating the Clean Air Act, or any delay on behalf of the Administration to avoid implementing new clean air and industrial pollution standards is an attack on the health of our families and communities, plain and simple!
Every year, coal-fired power plants, oil refineries, and other big polluters dump millions of tons of toxic pollutants into their air. Some of these pollutants lead to the development of ozone smog, which can cause increased numbers of asthma attacks and heart attacks among older adults, people who work or exercise outside, and our kids.
Ozone exposure is linked to premature death in people with heart and lung disease. And new research shows that pollutants like ozone smog are dangerous at levels that we once thought were safe.
Other pollutants, like mercury, are a potent neurotoxin that builds up in the environment and through the fish we eat is especially dangerous to children and pregnant women. Exposure can affect a child’s ability to walk, talk, read, write and learn.
EPA is preparing to update clean air standards and reduce the amount of the toxic pollution in the air that leads to increased ozone levels and dangerous levels of mercury. We know clean air standards work. Last year, the Clean Air Act saved 17,000 lives, and multiple studies have demonstrated that efforts to clean up the air worked — that using cleaner fuels or updating local air standards reduces asthma attacks in our kids and heart attacks and hospital visits in other vulnerable populations. Not only that, but recent studies conclude cleaning up the air provides a significant economic benefit to the country.
The only people who don't benefit from updating clean air standards are the polluters. That's why they're working to delay these new standards by any means possible. That is simply unacceptable, and HCWH nurses went to Washington to tell our policy makers just that.
As health care professionals, parents, and community members, we shouldn't stand for it. And our representatives in Washington shouldn't either!
Please consider contacting your legislators to tell them that any action by Congress to block the EPA from updating the Clean Air Act, or any delay on behalf of the Administration to avoid implementing new clean air and industrial pollution standards is an attack on the health of our families and communities, plain and simple!
Heath Care without Harm, an international coalition of more than 500 organizations in 53 countries, is working to transform the health care sector, without compromising patient safety or care, so that it is ecologically sustainable and no longer a source of harm to public health and the environment. To learn more about HCWH's work, visit our website at www.noharm.org, our YouTube channel at HCwithoutharm, and our twitter feed at hcwithoutharm.
Webinar: How Sustainable Hospitals Are Achieving Major Savings
Health Care Without Harm and The Commonwealth Fund present a webinar based on the recent groundbreaking findings on how hospitals can achieve savings and reduce their carbon footprint through sustainability programs. This one-hour webinar draws on the findings of a recent Health Care Without Harm Research Collaborative/ Commonwealth Fund study, "Can Sustainable Hospitals Help Bend the Health Care Cost Curve?" which shows that savings from interventions to reduce energy use and waste, and achieve operating room supply efficiencies could exceed $5.4 billion over five years and $15 billion over 10 years for the health care sector. In addition to detailing the study findings, the webinar includes presentations from two health systems about why they chose to focus on sustainability and what challenges and rewards are in store.
Key Resources
- Energy Impact Calculator
What are your facility's energy health impacts and costs? What can you do to improve them?

- Learn about Practice Greenhealth and the Healthcare Clean Energy Exchange
- Green Guide for Health Care Report:
A Prescriptive Path to Energy Efficiency for Hospitals
download report (pdf) read abstract (pdf) - Healthcare Energy Project Guidebook, designed to provide decision makers with knowledge about improving energy efficiency (pdf)

