Serving The Healthcare And Medical Waste Industries VOL. 6 NO. 4
oct-dec 2010
Attention Readers ! Are you looking for Products, Equipment or Services for your business or healthcare facility? If so, please check out these leading companies advertised in this issue: Infectious & Non-Infectious Waste Containers & Linen Carts Busch Systems - pg 5 Rehrig Healthcare Systems - pg 7 Rotonics Manufacturing - pg 12 Infectious Waste Sterilizing Systems OnSite Sterilization - pg 16 Ozonator Industries - pg 15 ReGen - pg 10 TrinovaMed Medical Waste Solutions - pg 9 Liquid Disposal Systems Bemis Health Care - pg 10 Shredding Equipment Vecoplan LLC - pg 8 Waste Management & Infection Compliance Services Waste Management - pg 2 X-Ray Film & Material Recovery Gemark Corporation - pg 11
Vecoplan shred truck operating at the Medical University of South Carolina.
Hospitals Save Big With On-Site Shred Trucks
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By P.J. Heller
t Palomar Pomerado Health, going green is also saving the medical system a lot of green. Not only is Palomar Pomerado Health’s on-site shredding truck enabling the facility to handle its own document shredding, but it is also expected to save the medical system more than $840,000 over five years. “We’re really trying to continue to make that connection between human health and the environment,” explains sustainability manager Barbara Hamilton. “If our mission is to promote health in the communities that we serve, then it’s also important that we follow the precautionary principle of ‘first do no harm.’ We have the opportunity to minimize our impact. “Hospitals are typically the biggest waste producers in a community,” she notes. “So if we can find ways to reduce our waste, then we’re going to be able to reduce the health impact of all that transportation, fuel, and emissions to transport the material, as well as all of the environmental impacts of extracting natural resources. These things have a direct impact on
human health.” A similar scenario is playing out more than 2,000 miles away at the Medical University of South Carolina, where a comparable switch from an outside document shredding company to an on-site operation saved $100,000 in the first year alone — including the purchase of a shredding truck. “It cost us less to buy the truck than we were spending on the contractor,” recalls sustainability manager Christine von Kolnitz Cooley. Now, after running the on-site document shredding program since 2006, von Kolnitz Cooley is convinced more than ever that the switch was justified. “I would say there is no contractor that could do what we do for the amount of money we do it for,” she says. “They could not match our price.” The Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston includes a 750-bed medical center (teaching hospital) and six colleges that train Continued on page 3