Respiratory Solutions
Going Green
- By Dick Fields
- May 01, 2010
When something is described as “green” these days, it implies an
effort to save our big blue marble. One cannot board a plane or sit in a restaurant
without repeatedly being reminded to conserve and preserve in order to limit
the impact on the Earth’s fragile and precious ecosystem.
A multitude of businesses have adopted a green culture, and many more are
exploring this eco-friendly trend. If you were to have this conversation with
the owners of these same businesses 10 or 15 years ago, you would have been
labeled a “weirdo tree hugger” and politely excused. In today’s
landscape of defining who we are and what we stand for, allegiance to the green
movement is seen as progressive.
In that spirit, our home respiratory and sleep therapy community must become
more engaged and participate in the green movement. There are numerous ways
to reduce wasteful processes and add more to the bottom line. What a great concept!
Below are three relatively simple examples that would have an immediate impact
on establishing your business as a responsible contributor to the health of
our planet.
Recycling PAP Masks
The majority of PAP interfaces are labeled “multiple patient usage,”
which signals that we can reuse these products in a variety of situations. Recycled
masks can be given to indigent patients, used as demo masks for patients who
require more intervention toward compliance, employed at free sleep clinics
or sold for cash to those patients who need another mask, but are not eligible
through insurance for some reason, like the dog ate their mask. Pasteurization
is one method to consider when adopting the practice of recycling PAP masks.
With very few exceptions, most masks will hold up to multiple cycling through
the pasteurization process. Our business purchased a tabletop pasteurizer several
years ago from Olympic Medical. The equipment cost about $5,000, and it required
some minor installation for a water supply and filtration system. The pasteurization
process has afforded our company enormous rewards and fl exibility. The payback
was almost immediate, due to our large volume of new CPAP setups. Our company
also pasteurizes about 150 to 200 masks weekly for use in our health system
sleep labs.
Many small- to mid-size home medical equipment companies cannot justify the
expense due to their volume and staffing limitations. But some may want to
consider the opportunity for a small business here, similar to dry cleaning.
This process will require an equipment dryer, such as a used 3M Mistogen, which
is available online. Anyone reading this idea can start to do the math and immediately
realize the potential. Add the pasteurization process to a good manufacturer
mask-replacement program, and you actually have a separate revenue-generating
stream. Better yet, you help the environment by reducing the waste of tossing
returned masks in the trash.
Granted, receiving a pasteurized mask may not be for every patient and occasionally
we hear complaints about the “yuck factor,” but those are usually
from the folks you just can’t please anyway. Recycling PAP masks is a
no-brainer. It will reduce your cost of goods, generate a revenue stream and
save our planet.
Cleaning Used Equipment
Another green opportunity exists with the use of a small ozone generator that
will “defunk” PAP equipment returned from a patient who has exposed
it to cigarette smoke or other odors. Typically, when this equipment is brought
back to the warehouse, it will collect dust for a while, get thrown away and
ultimately be carted off to a landfill.
With ozone generators, you can change that process and give new life to smelly
equipment. Our business has used ozone generators for years. The units can be
purchased online and can cost less than $100. The useful life of an ozone unit
is very good, considering the expense. The ozone is very powerful, removing
a large majority of the residual odor on equipment forever. The trick is not
to totally depend on the ozone alone since many situations require the use of
a manually sprayed deodorizing agent to augment the ozone’s effectiveness.
The PAP unit and the ozone generator need to run continuously for several days
in a well-vented cardboard box measuring about 3 feet by 20 inches by 15 inches.
In a box that size, it may even be possible to defunk two pieces of equipment
at the same time.
Before starting the process, remove all the filters. Further, there are times
when a nonwarranty device will need to be taken apart so that the soundproof
padding can receive more direct attention. Use the deodorizing spray liberally,
but do not apply it to the PCA board (power supply). We have not experienced
any problems or concerns using the ozone process, which enables our business
to return a viable device back to inventory to generate revenue again.
Cutting the Use of Distilled Water
When it comes to heated humidification, we can limit the use of distilled
water in those environmentally unfriendly plastic gallon jugs. I have been a
PAP device user for four years now, and I have never used a drop of distilled
water in my heated humidifier. I clean it every week, and my unit looks new.
Remember basic RT 101. Heated humidifiers produce water vapor. The molecules
of water vapor do not permit the transport of “critters” to the
patient. So even if the tap water were infested with critters, the patient would
not receive any bacteria.
The primary reason to use distilled water (that plastic gallon jug) is due
to the wide variations in the mineral content of tap water. The minerals react
with the aluminum used in most nonpermanent heated humidifier canisters, thus
creating some pitting, which will eventually erode and leak water all over the
antique Tiffany nightstand. Generally speaking, most permanent heated humidifiers use stainless steel. Therefore, they are not subject to the concern of minerals
pitting the metal. In addition, some tap water is high in calcium and other
minerals that will leave a residue and discolor the interior. Big deal. It may
not look great, but it will not harm the user, due to the moisture being delivered
to the patient in the form of water vapor, as explained above.
My point here is to help us feel better about not encouraging patients to
purchase those big jugs of distilled water, but to instead advise them to use
tap water when applicable. Or we could recommend they use a simple, inexpensive
water filter system to produce their own mineral-free water. Remember, those
big gallon jugs over the lifetime of the patient add up. Some may be recycled,
but many more will end up in a landfill near you.
What you chose to do with these green suggestions is a matter of how you want
your business to be perceived and to what degree you will consider moving outside
the box to help the planet.
This article originally appeared in the Respiratory & Sleep Management May 2010 issue of HME Business.
About the Author
Dick Fields, RRT, CPFT is Respiratory Manager at BayCare HomeCare in Largo, Florida, and an Editorial Advisory Board member.