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Climate-smart health technologies (CLISHEAT)

  • Duration: 2023 - 2025
  • Status: Ongoing

CLISHEAT project focuses on the climate impacts of healthcare and health technologies. Through the climate impact assessment, solutions are developed to decrease the carbon footprint of healthcare and health technologies and for climate change adaptation within healthcare.

Project management
Ari Nissinen
Project team
Aida Hosseinian, Annika Johansson, Jaakko Karvonen, Atte Pitkänen, Hannu Savolainen, Laura Sokka
Financiers
Research Council of Finland

The health care industry is among the most carbon-intensive service sectors in the industrialized world, causing around 4.4 % of the global greenhouse gas emissions. 60-80% of the carbon footprint of healthcare is due to clinical care, while current actions towards carbon-neutral healthcare aim largely on greening buildings and energy consumed in healthcare. CLISHEAT will obtain a detailed breakdown of the footprint of clinical care. With this knowledge, we can focus the development of new health technologies to reduce the carbon footprint. Critically, it is estimated that harmful and low-value treatments compose 32% of the carbon footprint of the health care sector, and increased data may add overdiagnosis. CLISHEAT brings this point to the attention of health technology developers and provide insight how artificial intelligence could be used to prevent overdiagnosis. Finally, climate change is damaging human health. CLISHEAT focuses on developing technologies that will help healthcare sector adapt to the increasing burden caused by the climate change. The focus of Syke researchers will be on assessing the carbon footprints of healthcare and health technologies and identifying measures for decreasing the footprints.

More information available at the Consortium leader (University of Turku) website: https://www.utu.fi/en/university/faculty-of-technology/mechanical-and-materials-engineering/research/materials-in-health-technology

CLISHEAT conference poster 2024.pdf (pdf, 331.94 KB)

This project has received funding from the European Union (NextGenerationEU instrument) and is funded by the Academy of Finland.

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More information

Ari Nissinen, Unit director, Finnish Environment Institute (Syke), firstname.lastname@syke.fi 

Atte Pitkänen, Researcher, Finnish Environment Institute (Syke), firstname.lastname@syke.fi