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2.
Radiology ; 307(4): e230441, 2023 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37097133

RESUMO

Background Radiology is a major contributor to health care's climate footprint due to energy-intensive devices, particularly MRI, which uses the most energy. Purpose To determine the energy, cost, and carbon savings that could be achieved through different scanner power management strategies. Materials and Methods In this retrospective evaluation, four outpatient MRI scanners from three vendors were individually equipped with power meters (1-Hz sampling rate). Power measurement logs were extracted for 39 days. Data were segmented into off, idle, prepared-to-scan, scan, or power-save modes for each scanner. Energy, cost (assuming a mean cost of $0.14 per kilowatt hour), and carbon savings were calculated for the lowest scanner activity modes. Data were summarized using descriptive statistics and 95% CIs. Results Projected annual energy consumption per scanner ranged from 82.7 to 171.1 MW-hours, with 72%-91% defined as nonproductive. Power draws for each mode were measured as 6.4 kW ± 0.1 (SD; power-save mode), 7.3 kW ± 0.6 to 9.7 kW ± 0.2 (off), 9.5 kW ± 0.9 to 14.5 kW ± 0.5 (idle), 17.3 kW ± 0.5 to 25.6 kW ± 0.6 (prepared-to-scan mode), and 28.6 kW ± 8.6 to 48.3 kW ± 11.8 (scan mode). Switching MRI units from idle to off mode for 12 hours overnight reduced power consumption by 25%-33%, translating to a potential annual savings of 12.3-21.0 MW-hours, $1717-$2943, and 8.7-14.9 metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent (MTCO2eq). The power-save mode further reduced consumption by 22%-28% compared with off mode, potentially saving an additional 8.8-11.4 MW-hours, $1226-$1594, and 6.2-8.1 MTCO2eq per year for 12 hours overnight. Implementation of a power-save mode for 12 hours overnight in all outpatient MRI units in the United States could save U.S. health care 58 863.2-76 288.2 MW-hours, $8.2-$10.7 million, and 41 606.4-54 088.3 MTCO2eq. Conclusion Powering down MRI units made radiology departments more energy efficient and showed substantial sustainability and cost benefits. © RSNA, 2023 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the article by Vosshenrich and Heye in this issue.


Assuntos
Pegada de Carbono , Radiologia , Estados Unidos , Humanos , Redução de Custos , Estudos Retrospectivos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética
3.
Radiology ; 295(3): 593-605, 2020 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32208096

RESUMO

Background Awareness of energy efficiency has been rising in the industrial and residential sectors but only recently in the health care sector. Purpose To measure the energy consumption of modern CT and MRI scanners in a university hospital radiology department and to estimate energy- and cost-saving potential during clinical operation. Materials and Methods Three CT scanners, four MRI scanners, and cooling systems were equipped with kilowatt-hour energy measurement sensors (2-Hz sampling rate). Energy measurements, the scanners' log files, and the radiology information system from the entire year 2015 were analyzed and segmented into scan modes, as follows: net scan (actual imaging), active (room time), idle, and system-on and system-off states (no standby mode was available). Per-examination and peak energy consumption were calculated. Results The aggregated energy consumption imaging 40 276 patients amounted to 614 825 kWh, dedicated cooling systems to 492 624 kWh, representing 44.5% of the combined consumption of 1 107 450 kWh (at a cost of U.S. $199 341). This is equivalent to the usage in a town of 852 people and constituted 4.0% of the total yearly energy consumption at the authors' hospital. Mean consumption per CT examination over 1 year was 1.2 kWh, with a mean energy cost (±standard deviation) of $0.22 ± 0.13. The total energy consumption of one CT scanner for 1 year was 26 226 kWh ($4721 in energy cost). The net consumption per CT examination over 1 year was 3580 kWh, which is comparable to the usage of a two-person household in Switzerland; however, idle state consumption was fourfold that of net consumption (14 289 kWh). Mean MRI consumption over 1 year was 19.9 kWh per examination, with a mean energy cost of $3.57 ± 0.96. The mean consumption for a year in the system-on state was 82 174 kWh per MRI examination and 134 037 kWh for total consumption, for an energy cost of $24 127. Conclusion CT and MRI energy consumption is substantial. Considerable energy- and cost-saving potential is present during nonproductive idle and system-off modes, and this realization could decrease total cost of ownership while increasing energy efficiency. © RSNA, 2020.


Assuntos
Conservação de Recursos Energéticos/economia , Redução de Custos/economia , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/economia , Radiologia/economia , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X/economia , Alemanha , Humanos , Sistemas de Informação em Radiologia , Suíça
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