Hospital gets help recycling fluorescent lights
Frank Lockwood
Hermiston Herald- January 23, 2003
Hermiston-- A special grant is now aimed at easing the
pain of recycling- for hospitals. The
grant will help Good Shepherd Medical Center deal with used Fluorescent light
tubes, which contain mercury.
In
the past two years, while treating over 100,000 annual aches, pains, and health
concerns, Good Shepherd reportedly handled about 14 tons of paper- enough to
cause a real headache for any business other than a stouthearted recycler.
But
paper is just one waste stream for Good Shepherd Health Care system, Plastic is
another. And the hospital and other
aware businesses realize that burned- out- fluorescent light tubes can prepare
a risk to the environment. Gone are the
days when the tubes could be just dumped into the landfill, now businesses are
supposed to dispose of them properly.
“If
it comes in the front door, it’s got to go out the back door sooner or later,”
the hospital’s Environmental Services Manager, Ken Gummer said. He was speaking of the tons of supplies,
food, wrappers and other items that must be disposed of each year. Gummer’s job
is to see that the waste is handled in a way that protects the environment and
the public.
Inoperable
fluorescent tubes can create a hazard because they still contain toxic metals,
including cadmium and mercury. Gummer
said, Mercury is considered a serious health hazard and according to the U.S
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), health care facilities are the fourth –
largest source of mercury in the environment.
Mercury, which is highly toxic to the human central nervous system,
kidneys and liver, is commonly used in blood pressure monitoring devices,
thermometers, batteries and fluorescent light bulbs.
Good
Shepherd will receive a share of a grant that helps health providers to recycle
mercury-containing fluorescent lamps.
Grant recipients contribute matching money, staff time or services. The City of Milwaukie, working in
partnership with the Portland-based Oregon Center for Environmental Health, was
awarded $20,238 to help the Center develop fluorescent lamp recycling program
at Legacy Health System in Portland, Asante Health System in Medford, and Good
Shepherd Health System In Hermiston.
Gummer
said he had not yet been told the amount that Good Shepherd would receive, but
the money will help pay transportation costs to ship used fluorescent bulbs to
a proper disposal sight. According to a
DEQ press release, The grant is an incentive for hospitals to participate in a
statewide recycling program. At least
50,000 mercury-containing fluorescent lamps will be diverted from the solid
waste stream from 10 to 15 hospitals in the first year, with additional
hospitals taking part in the future.
The Oregon Center for Environmental Health-part of the Oregon health
Care Without Harm campaign- will monitor recycling efforts at each
participating hospital, will train staff and will help set up the program.
Good
Shepherd has already been training for better waste management, and has hosted
one of three seminars on Health Care Without Harm. The seminars teach health care representatives how to keep
material out of the waste stream, through recycling, and how to reduce toxins
to the environment. Invitations were
sent out to hospitals, nursing homes, and other health care institutions. “We re trying to promote recycling in rural
Oregon,” Gummer said.
More
information is available on the internet at www.noharm.org,
he said, “ Oregon was the first state to ban fever thermometers last
year, in early 2002, because of mercury, Gummer said.
Various
hospital waste streams are kept separate from each other and, if hazardous,
treated accordingly. For example,
biohazards are handled, by contract, through a company and are not part the universal
waste stream.
Waste silver, present in film, is extracted by a contractor. The hospital is looking for a sponsor for a
plastics recycling program. And the hospital will dispose of diabetics needles
if they bring them in a proper container as described by the law, Gummer said.
As to paper waste, the hospital uses Columbia Industries, a not- for-profit
company that hires physically and mentally challenged people to recycle paper.
“We make a lot of paper,” Gummer said.
Fluorescent
tubes, though small in terms of the tons of them used by the hospital, are a
potentially harmful waste stream because of the mercury they contain. Laws that were changed a long time ago are
now being enforced, but that is good.
Gummer said, “We don’t want to put nasty things down the drain, or to
contaminate the atmosphere.” Recycling
also reduce the landfill bill, he said.
GSH Public Relations Director, Tricia Fenley commented, “Good Shepherd
is excited to participate in the trend towards recycling.”