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St George’s Hospital first in UK to give ‘green’ gas and air to women in labour

Dental patients and women in labour will be given ‘green gas and air’ at St George’s hospital, reducing pain on the planet as well as during childbirth and tooth extractions.

In a UK first, the hospital, in Blackshaw Road, Tooting, is investing in a device in its dental unit dubbed the ‘catalytic converter of gas and air’.

Nitrous oxide, regularly combined with oxygen to produce Entonox, provides sedation in dental and emergency procedures as well as pain relief in labour.

The gas has almost 300 times the global warming potential of carbon dioxide.

The mobile nitrous oxide conversion unit at St George’s will be the first in the UK to be trialled in a dental department and breaks gas down into harmless oxygen and nitrogen before it is released, thereby reducing its impact on the environment as well as staff exposure to the medical gas.

It is already being used in St George’s endoscopy and the midwifery led birth unit.

Dr Emma Evans, South West London Clinical Lead for Net Zero and Consultant Anaesthetist at St George’s, said: “Patients won’t experience any difference in their clinical care and how they receive pain relief remains the same, but after its use, it will be disposed of through the device to break down the gas to be more environmentally friendly.

“After trialling mobile devices in the dental, endoscopy and midwifery led birth units, we will scope out the potential for a central system to service a larger number of clinical areas too, to further reduce our overall carbon footprint.”

This is the second time St George’s has been recognised for its sustainability strategy after the Trust was the first in the UK to decarbonise its patient menu last year.

(Pictured top: St.George’s Hospital, Tooting cc-by-sa/2.0 – © Peter Trimming – geograph.org.uk/p/2829072)

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