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Solving hospital waste management problem in a developing country – a case of Varanasi city in India

Purpose The purpose of this study is to solve the problem of healthcare waste management in developing countries. The buildup of medical waste has attracted the attention of all spheres of society due to the expanding population and developing economy. Timely collection and processing of medical was...

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Published in:Facilities (Bradford, West Yorkshire, England) West Yorkshire, England), 2024-03, Vol.42 (5/6), p.421-445
Main Authors: Raj, Abhishek, Mishra, Vinaytosh, Tanksale, Ajinkya, Samuel, Cherian
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Language:English
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container_end_page 445
container_issue 5/6
container_start_page 421
container_title Facilities (Bradford, West Yorkshire, England)
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creator Raj, Abhishek
Mishra, Vinaytosh
Tanksale, Ajinkya
Samuel, Cherian
description Purpose The purpose of this study is to solve the problem of healthcare waste management in developing countries. The buildup of medical waste has attracted the attention of all spheres of society due to the expanding population and developing economy. Timely collection and processing of medical waste are extremely important due to its potential hazards. Although the problem of planning medical waste management has been addressed in developed countries, it persists in several developing countries. This research is motivated by an example of a city in India characterized by a dense population, abundant health-care facilities and a lack of planning for managing large medical waste generated daily. Design/methodology/approach The authors address the problem of designing the network of collection and processing facilities for medical waste and optimizing the vehicle route that collects and transfers the waste between facilities. Due to distinct topographic restrictions in the considered city, the collection and transfer process needs to be conducted in two echelons – from hospitals to collection centers using smaller vehicles and then to the processing facilities using trucks. This work addresses these two problems as a two-echelon location-routing problem. Findings A mixed-integer programming model is developed to minimize the cost of opening the facilities and transporting medical waste. Several managerial insights are drawn up to assist planners and decision-makers. Originality/value This study follows a case study approach to provide a descriptive and prescriptive approach to hospital waste management in the ancient city of Varanasi. The city has witnessed unplanned growth over the years and is densely populated. The health-care facilities in the city have a large catchment area and attract patients from neighboring districts. The situation analysis based on secondary data and unstructured interviews of the stakeholders suggests that the ad hoc approach prevails in present hospital waste management in the city.
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source Emerald:Jisc Collections:Emerald Subject Collections HE and FE 2024-2026:Emerald Premier (reading list)
subjects Bacterial infections
Case studies
Catchment areas
Cities
Developed countries
Developing countries
Disease transmission
Economic growth
Garbage collection
GDP
Gross Domestic Product
Health care
Health care facilities
Hepatitis
Hospital wastes
Hospitals
Infections
Integer programming
LDCs
Medical dressings
Medical wastes
Mixed integer
Pharmaceutical industry
Population
Population density
Public health
Trucks
Unstructured data
Urbanization
Waste management
title Solving hospital waste management problem in a developing country – a case of Varanasi city in India
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