A single chronic haemodialysis patient generates roughly 1.5 tonnes of clinical waste and consumes 25,000–60,000 litres of water each year. This hub is a working clinician's toolkit for cutting that footprint without compromising care.
Recovering reverse-osmosis reject water for sanitary, landscape, or cooling use — engineering specs and infection-control safeguards.
A 12-step audit framework — machines, HVAC, lighting, standby load — with measurable targets and tracking templates.
Segregation, reuse where evidence supports it, and procurement-side advocacy for lower-footprint consumables.
How home haemodialysis and PD compare on water, energy, and travel emissions — and how this should shape modality counselling.
Inhaler choice, injectable vs oral routes, and avoiding low-value medicines — small choices that compound across a unit.
Terms of reference, KPIs, reporting cadence — how to make sustainability a permanent quality metric, not a one-off project.
NephroZayan treats environmental sustainability as a core clinical quality measure — not a side project. Every page that recommends a clinical action is reviewed for its downstream resource implications. A treatment that wastes water, electricity, or plastic at scale is not a high-quality treatment.