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Sustainability in the IVF laboratory: recommendations of an expert panel

Reproductive BioMedicine Online 2023 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Francesca Farlie, Giles Palmer, Jacques Cohen, Charles Calcagni, А.В. Горбунова, James Lawford Davies, Carol Loscher, Roisin O'Raghallaigh, Timothy Sharp, Daniela Smale, Pernilla Sörme, Cassandra L. Thiel, Alessandra Alteri, Alison Campbell, Kirsty Crompton, Sharon T. Mortimer, Valerio Pisaturo, Annelies Tolpe, Mina Alikani

Summary

Researchers and experts from reproductive medicine, environmental science, and architecture convened to develop practical recommendations for making IVF laboratories more environmentally sustainable, covering areas like energy-efficient building design, waste reduction, and greener cryostorage. The effort reflects growing recognition that the healthcare industry — including fertility treatment — carries a significant carbon footprint that needs to be addressed.

The healthcare industry is a major contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. Assisted reproductive technology is part of the larger healthcare sector, with its own heavy carbon footprint. The social, economic and environmental costs of this collective carbon footprint are becoming clearer, as is the impact on human reproductive health. Alpha Scientists in Reproductive Medicine and the International IVF Initiative collaborated to seek and formulate practical recommendations for sustainability in IVF laboratories. An international panel of experts, enthusiasts and professionals in reproductive medicine, environmental science, architecture, biorepository and law convened to discuss the topics of importance to sustainability. Recommendations were issued on how to build a culture of sustainability in the workplace, implement green design and building, use life cycle analysis to determine the environmental impact, manage cryostorage more sustainably, and understand and manage laboratory waste with prevention as a primary goal. The panel explored whether the industry supporting IVF is sustainable. An example is provided to illustrate the application of green principles to an IVF laboratory through a certification programme. The UK legislative landscape surrounding sustainability is also discussed and a few recommendations on 'Green Conferencing' are offered.

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