DOAJ Open Access 2025

Eco-Friendly vs. Traditional Cleaning in Healthcare Settings: Microbial Safety and Environmental Footprint

Riccardo Fontana Mattia Buratto Anna Caproni Chiara Nordi Mariangela Pappadà +5 lainnya

Abstrak

Growing concern for environmental sustainability has resulted in the implementation of sanitization methods that respect ecological principles. This research evaluates a “green” sanitizing protocol that uses CAM (Minimum Environmental Criteria)-compliant products against a traditional protocol within two ASL Roma 1 facilities. The study performed a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) following ISO 14040, ISO 14044, and ISO 14067 standards to measure greenhouse gases emissions. Microbiological sampling was conducted according to established protocols across three different risk zones utilizing contact plates and surface swabs. The Life Cycle Assessment showed that CO<sub>2</sub> emissions reduced by 49.6% to 53.3% at different sites due to reduced energy use together with concentrated detergents and improved washing cycles. Microbiological testing revealed notable decreases in contamination rates across both cleaning systems yet demonstrated the “green” system achieved superior results specifically within high-risk zones. The “green” protocol matched traditional cleaning methods hygienically but delivered significant environmental advantages which positions it as a sustainable hospital cleaning solution.

Penulis (10)

R

Riccardo Fontana

M

Mattia Buratto

A

Anna Caproni

C

Chiara Nordi

M

Mariangela Pappadà

M

Martina Facchini

C

Cesare Buffone

B

Beatrice Bandera

L

Luciano Vogli

P

Peggy Marconi

Format Sitasi

Fontana, R., Buratto, M., Caproni, A., Nordi, C., Pappadà, M., Facchini, M. et al. (2025). Eco-Friendly vs. Traditional Cleaning in Healthcare Settings: Microbial Safety and Environmental Footprint. https://doi.org/10.3390/hygiene5030037

Akses Cepat

PDF tidak tersedia langsung

Cek di sumber asli →
Lihat di Sumber doi.org/10.3390/hygiene5030037
Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2025
Sumber Database
DOAJ
DOI
10.3390/hygiene5030037
Akses
Open Access ✓