Green Practice News

December 2025

In This Issue:

  • Continuity of Care: On-Site Energy Resilience Belongs in Every Clinic
  • Digital Efficiency as Climate Resilience: Smarter Workflows Improve Care, Cut Costs, and Reduce Emissions
  • Patients Trust Their Clinicians: How Climate-Health Conversations Strengthen Care and Communities
  • Take a Survey!
Continuity of Care: On-Site Energy Resilience Belongs in Every Clinic


Patient care should not pause when the grid fails. For outpatient clinics, energy reliability is directly tied to clinical safety. Yet most facilities remain dependent on the same aging grid infrastructure that powers surrounding homes and retail spaces. That vulnerability can translate into thousands of dollars in losses, serious risks to medication integrity, and interruption to procedures that patients rely upon. Backup generators powered by diesel fuel or propane are expensive, not always reliable, and highly polluting.

When the Lights Go Out, Losses are Large
A 2024 U.S. analysis of climate-related grid stress found that the healthcare industry has experienced a dramatic rise in service disruptions linked to extreme weather. Outpatient clinics faced some of the most significant impacts: cancelled appointments, spoiled supplies, and reputational damage that can take years to repair. Many practices reported losing up to $10,000 in revenue and inventory from a single multi-hour outage.

The opportunity is clear: on-site energy systems—microgrids. A microgrid consists of photovoltaic solar panels to ceate electricity and on-site batteries to store that power. This is a practical and increasingly affordable way for clinics to protect continuity of care. These technologies allow outpatient facilities to remain open, keep essential devices online, and preserve lifesaving medications during blackouts.

Microgrid systems intelligently balance solar generation, battery reserves, and grid input to create a self-sustaining power source during outages. Even small-to-medium clinics can reliably power:

  • Electronic health record systems
  • Point-of-care diagnostics
  • Refrigeration for vaccines and medications
  • Ventilation and essential lighting
  • Communications systems for staff and patients

A Case Study in Practical Resilience
Consider a 20,000-square-foot family medicine clinic in the Southeast that installed a 200 kW solar system paired with a 400 kWh battery. During a major storm event last year, the grid failed for 11 hours—yet the clinic operated at 78% of normal power load throughout the disruption. No appointments were cancelled, vaccines remained stable, and digital systems stayed operational. The clinic later calculated that the avoided losses exceeded $9,500, with additional savings from reduced diesel generator use.

This scenario is becoming increasingly common. Clinics once limited by cost or infrastructure now have access to:
  • Tax credits covering 30–50% of system installation
  • Modular battery units suitable for small practices
  • Turnkey microgrid solutions managed by healthcare-focused vendors

Resilience That Pays for Itself
Energy resilience delivers more than reliability. It also supports:

  • Lower operating costs (solar offsetting daytime loads)
  • Reduced Scope 2 emissions
  • Higher staff satisfaction
  • Improved patient trust—patients remember which clinics stayed open strategy.

How My Green Doctor Helps
My Green Doctor offers provides personalized sustainability coaching and free teaching resources to help achive environmental sustainability. And if a microgrid is the right option for your building, our sustainability experts can help you find local vendors to provide free estimates for a system that suits your needs.

Through the Entire Practice Green Membership, clinics also experience many benefits, including:

  • Cost Savings: A four-doctor practice may save at least $16,000 over five years simply by following MGD’s structured sustainability steps.
  • Integrated Sustainability: MGD’s experts can help the clinic’s goals with those of the parent health systemto meet the needs of  accreditation requirements or regulations.
  • Health Outcomes: Reliable clean energy protects medications, reduces pollution exposure, and strengthens community resilience.

Energy resilience is no longer optional. It is a core component of modern clinical care and is essential for continuity, safety, and long-term sustainability. With the right systems and support, every clinic can become resilient, energy-secure, and climate-ready. Contact My Green Doctor  to begin a conversation!

Ask My Green Doctor
Digital Efficiency as Climate Action: Smarter Workflows Improve Care, Cut Costs, and Reduce Emissions

Digital systems such as electroinic health records ((EHRs), scheduling platforms, and billing software rarely come to mind when practice managers think about sustainability. Yet digital waste is one of the most overlooked sources of unnecessary emissions, staff fatigue, and operational inefficiency in outpatient care.

Every redundant click, every outdated printer, every sluggish software platform contributes to wasted energy, employee frustration, and Scope 2 and 3 emissions. Digital efficiency is not just a convenience; it is also a climate strategy.

The Hidden Footprint of Digital Waste
The Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) is a nonprofit organizaion that focuses on information technology in healthcare.. A 2024 HIMSS report revealed that clinics adopting integrated digital workflows reduce administrative time by up to 27%, decrease server-side energy consumption, and improve staff satisfaction. https://www.himss.org/resources

Inefficiency hides in everyday routines:

  • Duplicate data entry
  • Legacy software running on high-energy hardware
  • Excessive printing
  • Poorly optimized EHR templates
  • Idle-time energy waste from exam rooms and workstations

These friction points collectively slow clinical throughput and quietly increase carbon emissions.

Why Digital Efficiency Matters for Sustainability
Digital systems shape energy use, resource consumption, and the flow of care. When optimized, they enable:

  • Lower electricity use
  • Faster patient processing
  • Fewer staff hours spent on repetitive tasks
  • Reduced material waste (paper, ink, plastic)

Three High-Impact Digital Upgrades for Practice Managers

  1. Cloud-Based EHR Optimization
    Modern cloud systems rely on efficient data centers instead of energy-intensive on-site servers. This reduces both emissions and IT burdens.
  2. Paper-to-Digital Migration
    A typical printed chart has a large carbon footprint—pulp, manufacturing, transport, ink, and disposal. Digital-first clinics sharply cut waste and storage costs.
  3. Intelligent Scheduling Systems
    Smart scheduling minimizes idle exam room time, reducing heating, cooling, and lighting energy while improving patient flow.

The Human Side: Staff and Patients Benefit
Clinics that modernize digitally report:

  • Lower staff burnout
  • Smoother patient communication
  • Faster turnaround times
  • More stable, predictable workflows

Digital optimization is a quality-of-care strategy as much as an efficiency one.

How My Green Doctor Helps
My Green Doctor provides free resources, coaching, and consulting to help clinics upgrade digital systems in practical, budget-conscious ways. Through the Entire Practice Green Membership, clinics also benefit from:

Job Satisfaction: Staff thrive in a healthy, organized, and modern workplace.
Patient Relations: Patients appreciate smooth systems, reduced wait times, and the clinic’s visible commitment to efficiency and sustainability.
Integrated Sustainability: MGD helps ensure digital upgrades align with hospital-level sustainability policies or governmental requirements.

Digital improvements are small changes with big impact. They reduce emissions, cut costs, and make clinical care better for everyone. For clinics facing rising pressures, digital efficiency is one of the fastest paths to a more resilient and climate-smart future.

Patients Trust Their Clinicians: How Climate-Health Conversations Strengthen Care and Build Resilient Communities

Healthcare professionals are consistently ranked among the most trusted group in society. Patients turn to clinicians for guidance not only on treatments, but on life choices that affect long-term health. This trust positions outpatient clinics as powerful catalysts for building climate-resilient communities.

A 2024 Lancet review showed that brief climate-health conversations—often under one minute—significantly improve patient understanding and preventive behaviors related to heat, air quality, hydration, and chronic disease management. https://www.thelancet.com/climate-and-health

Trust as a Clinical Asset
Patients act on information when it comes from a clinician they know. A simple explanation of how extreme heat affects heart disease, asthma, or medication timing can prevent serious events. When patients understand the direct links between environmental exposures and their own health, they make safer choices. This reduces emergency room visits and hospitalizations.

Three Messages With High Clinical Impact

  1. Heat-Safe Behaviors
    Guidance on hydration, shade, avoiding midday heat, and adjusting activity levels can prevent heat stress, especially for older adults and those with chronic conditions.
  2. Air-Quality Awareness
    Most patients are unaware that particulate matter air pollutants (PM2.5) affects asthma, COPD, and cardiovascular health. Teaching patients how to check their local air quality on a daily basis empowers patients to manager their own risks.
  3. Energy-Safe Home Strategies
    Patients with chronic illness benefit from knowing how to maintain medication stability, how to stay cool during power outages, and how to protect themselves from heat-related dehydration.

Strengthening Community Health Through Education
Clinics that integrate climate-health communication will achieve:

  • Higher patient engagement
  • Fewer preventable emergencies
  • Stronger community trust
  • Greater staff confidence in addressing patiet risks

Climate-informed care is not political. It is preventative medicine—rooted in evidence, compassion, and patient safety.

How My Green Doctor Helps Clinics Lead
My Green Doctor offers free resources, coaching, and sustainability consulting to help clinicians incorporate short, effective climate-health messages into routine visits. This is not added work. It is supported work.

Through the Entire Practice Green Membership, clinics gain additional advantages:

Patient Relations: Peer-reviewed research shows patients appreciate receiving MGD educational resources—and often make significant home lifestyle changes because of them.
Physician Recruitment: Sustainability commitments appeal to high-value clinical staff seeking impact-driven workplaces.
Health Outcomes: Clinics that reduce environmental exposures see healthier patients and stronger community resilience.

Contact My Green Doctor  to set up a FREE consultation on making your clinic more sustainable.

Ask My Green Doctor
Tell health insurance companies how they can support environmental sustinabaility! Health Care Without Harm (HCWH) is a non-profit that for almost thirty years has helped hospitals to improve energy resilience. HCWH’s Health Insurers Working Group – which includes insurers covering about 45% of Americans – wants to hear directly from health professionals. Your insights are critical to determining the policies and practices that best protect patients and decrease the pollution associated with healthcare.

Easy participation: This survey has 4 modules featuring 22 questions and should take about 20 minutes. HCWH welcomes responses from all U.S. health professionals – no environmental health expertise required. You do not have to be currently practicing. We also welcome responses from health professional students who have provided care to patients. The survey will remain open until December 11, 2025.

If you have questions about the survey, please email [email protected]. We truly appreciate your participation.

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