Asthma inhalers emit as much carbon as a 290-km drive: Study

New guidance by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) found five doses from the device generate the same carbon emissions as a nine-mile car trip.
Asthma inhalers emit as much carbon as a 290-km drive: Study Asthmatic patients are being encouraged to opt for environmentally friendly inhalers after it was revealed the most popular versions emit the same amount of greenhouse gas as a car journey between London and Sheffield.

New guidance by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) found five doses from the device generate the same carbon emissions as a nine-mile car trip.

That means each 100-dose inhaler has a carbon footprint roughly equivalent to a 180-mile (about 290km) drive.

“People who need to use metered dose inhalers should absolutely continue to (use them), but if you have the choice of a green option, do think about the environment,” Professor Gillian Leng, deputy chief executive of Nice, said.

This is the first time Nice has assessed the carbon footprint of a drug, as part of work by its NHS sustainability unit looking at the environmental impact of the health service.

The carbon footprint of the HFCs in a single inhaler dose have is equivalent to around 500g of carbon dioxide. By comparison, dry powder inhalers contain just 20g of carbon dioxide per equivalent dose and work well for many patients.

The new Nice decision aid also urges patients to return used inhalers to local pharmacies so that they can be safely disposed of, or to recycle them where the service is available.