Mercury
Mercury is a potent neurotoxin that can affect the brain, spinal cord, kidneys and the development of children. Mercury pollution is a serious global environmental and public health problem which causes a variety of adverse impacts throughout the world.
If discarded as a waste, mercury will eventually make its way into the environment where organisms living in rivers, lakes, or moist earth transform it into methyl mercury, a highly toxic organic mercury. This type of mercury, which affects nerves and brains at very low levels, persists and accumulates in animals, fish and the global environment. Because methyl mercury impairs the neurological development of fetuses, it can cause problems in cognitive thinking, memory, attention, language, and fine motor and visual spatial skills in children.
Mercury is found in thermometers, blood pressure devices, lab chemicals, cleaners and other products used in healthcare. Substantial releases of mercury to the environment occur as a result of breakages, spills, improper disposal and other means. The United Nations Environment Programme lists various healthcare-related products and activities as "important sources of anthropogenic releases" of mercury. Mercury spills in hospitals, clinics and labs expose doctors, nurses, other health care workers and patients to elemental mercury. At room temperature, significant amounts of liquid elemental mercury transform to a gas (see the mercury vapor video on this page), exposing workers or patients in the area to potentially toxic levels.
World Health Organization policy promotes the use of alternatives to mercury-containing thermometers and other medical instruments, toward the goal of their eventual phase-out. Fortunately, there are safe, cost-effective non-mercury alternatives for nearly all uses of mercury in health care.
As many healthcare institutions in industrialized countries are phasing out and retiring their own mercury-containing instruments, some manufacturers of these instruments are redirecting their marketing to health institutions in developing countries. In some cases, when healthcare institutions in industrialized countries retire their old mercury-containing instruments, these instruments are donated to institutions in developing countries. Without healthcare management systems that assure the use of mercury-free devices and the proper clean-up and final disposal of mercury-containing ones, the total amount of mercury released to the environment by healthcare institutions in developing countries is growing.
The goal of this UNDP/GEF project is to protect public health and the global environment from the impacts of dioxin and mercury releases. Project activities are intended to reduce the healthcare sector's contribution to mercury pollution by helping to integrate the use of mercury-free devices and improving mercury spill management systems in model hospitals within each project country. Learn more about this project.
by Toxics Link
June 20th, 2012
by Organización Munidal de la Salud
November 22nd, 2011
by UN/GEF Global Healthcare Waste Project- Lebanon Project Team
October 5th, 2011
by The Hindu
July 13th, 2011
by Salud sin Dano/ Health Care Without Harm
July 13th, 2011
by Health Care Without Harm
June 6th, 2011
by World Health Organization
June 6th, 2011
by UN/GEF Global Healthcare Waste Project
April 18th, 2011
HCWH/ WHO/ UNDP GEF Healthcare Waste Project
March 17th, 2011
Health Care Without Harm News
March 15th, 2011
The Times of India
November 22nd, 2010
by UN/GEF Global Healthcare Waste Project
September 29th, 2010
by Salud Sin Daño (HCWH Latin America), http://termometrosinmercurio.org/
September 22nd, 2010
by PNUD/ GEF : Projet international de gestion des déchets de soins médicaux
July 31st, 2010
by UN/GEF Global Healthcare Waste Project
July 22nd, 2010
by World Health Organization & Health Care Without Harm, http://www.mercuryfreehealthcare.org/
June 3rd, 2010
Health Care Without Harm News
February 25th, 2010
by J. Emmanuel & P. Orris, UN/GEF Global Healthcare Waste Project
February 23rd, 2010
Philippine Daily Inquirer
February 22nd, 2010
by Anu Agarawal- Toxics Link
November 10th, 2009
Health Care Without Harm News
September 23rd, 2009
by European Commission Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks
September 23rd, 2009
by UN/GEF Global Healthcare Waste Project
September 5th, 2009
by Health Care Without Harm
January 1st, 2009
by World Health Organization
August 1st, 2005



