HCWH's co-founder Gary Cohen is a recipient of the prestigious Skoll Award. This video, chronicling the evolution of HCWH's work, premiered at the 2009 Skoll World Forum. enlarge video
Dioxin
Dioxin is a highly toxic and persistent substance that is the unintentional byproduct of medical waste incineration and PVC plastic production. Other sources of dioxin include paper and pulp mills, municipal incinerators, cement kilns that burn chemical waste, and the manufacturing of some chlorinated pesticides.
Dioxin is a known human carcinogen. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the general population exposure to dioxin may cause a lifetime cancer risk that is 1,000 times higher than the EPA's "acceptable" risk level. Other health problems associated with dioxin exposure include birth defects, learning disabilities, endometriosis, infertility, suppressed immune function, reduced IQ and hyperactive behavior in children.
Health Care and Dioxin Pollution
In 1994, the US EPA estimated that medical waste incinerators were the leading source of dioxin air pollution. While no longer a leading source of dioxin pollution — thanks to the closure of thousands of medical waste incinerators due to grassroots activism and federal pollution standards — medical waste incineration is still a source of dioxin pollution, due to the large amount of disposable PVC plastic products used by hospitals.
HCWH continues to work toward eliminating the health care sector's contribution to dioxin pollution by advocating for the closure of medical waste incinerators and the phase out of PVC plastic products.
To learn more about non-incineration treatment options for the disposal of medical waste, see the Alternatives to Incineration page.
Key Resources
- Why Health Care is Moving Away from PVC (pdf)
- US FDA Public Health Notification on DEHP
- Weight of the Evidence on DEHP (pdf)
- Dioxin, PVC and Health Care (pdf)
- What's Wrong with Incineration? (pdf)
- Non-Incineration Treatment Technologies: HCWH Report (pdf)
- Stericycle: Living Up to its Mission? (pdf)
- Summary of FDA Safety Assessment on DEHP (pdf)
- DEHP Exposures During the Medical Care of Infants (pdf)
- Neonatal Exposure to DEHP and Opportunities for Prevention (pdf)
- Aggregate Exposures to Phthalates in Humans: HCWH 2002 Report (pdf)
- Report: Summary of Health Canada Expert Panel (pdf)
- 2005 Harvard study on NICU exposures (pdf)
- Alternatives to PVC and DEHP
- Pediatric Hospitals: Take the NICU No Harm survey! Find out more about PVC-Free Building Materials (pdf)
- Health Care Without Harm's list of Health Care Institutions Moving Away from PVC/DEHP

