Traditional plastic medical consumables are non-degradable, causing ecological pollution, and lack a full life-cycle traceability mechanism, failing to meet the dual needs of medical institutions for environmental compliance and quality control.
Utilizing food-grade virgin wood pulp and a medical-grade waterproof and oil-resistant coating process, disposable pulp molded medical consumables (such as trays and petri dishes) are produced. A full-chain traceability system from "forest to factory to hospital" ensures traceable raw materials, controllable processes, and measurable emissions. A dual drying system ensures a sterile production environment, and the products maintain their physical strength even after 121℃ high-temperature steam sterilization.
A collaboration with a listed pharmaceutical company to customize medical trays. A single batch's carbon footprint label shows a 45% reduction in carbon emissions compared to traditional plastic consumables, reducing non-degradable waste by 2,000 tons annually. The product has passed ISO13485 medical device quality management system certification and FDA food contact material certification, supporting real-time traceability of each batch's production data back to the raw material forest.