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Health
Care Without Harm aims to change environmental policies and practices
currently employed by health-care institutions both domestically
and abroad. These changes include improving practices of medical
waste disposal, product purchasing and recycling, and phasing out
polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plastics and mercury. HCWH promotes comprehensive
pollution-prevention practices; supports the development and use
of environmentally safe products and technologies; and educates
health-care institutions, providers, workers, and consumers about
their impact on public health and the environment. The campaign,
which was founded in 1998 by 23 organizations, today numbers 416
in more than 40 countries.
What
makes the campaign such a success is the diversity of interests
and groups that have come to the table to solve these issues. Some
hospitals led the way in changing their behavior, demonstrating
to the rest of the industry that these changes are feasible. Physicians,
nurses, patient advocacy organizations, religious groups and labor
unions have all participated and, together with hospital administrators,
are working to pressure large medical-equipment suppliers into providing
alternatives.
Another
key to the coalition's success has been its focus on a national
and global strategy to eliminate harmful chemicals. The V. Kann
Rasmussen Foundation's support of HCWH has been instrumental in
the campaign's efforts to make health-care providers, medical-supply
purchasers and medical-product manufacturers aware of the public
health and environmental consequences of current medical practice.
Although HCWH is a global coalition of organizations with an international
perspective and strategy, a large portion of the work it does is
carried out at the local levelin cities and towns around the
world. These myriad local effortsfrom closing down medical-waste
incinerators to altering purchasing patterns at small hospitalsare
in service to one of HCWH's primary long-term goals: educating and
empowering health professionals to become advocates for environmental
health improvements in society at large.
For
more information visit: www.noharm.org
All rights reserved © Copyright V. Kann Rasmussen Foundation 2006
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