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Hospital Food Gets An Upgrade

by: Jill Richardson

Sun Aug 17, 2008 at 16:00:00 PM PDT


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At long last, hospital food is getting an upgrade. Hospitals have long been on a notorious list (along with airplanes and college dorms) of places with horrible food. What distinguishes hospitals from airplanes, though, is that hospitals are places where the sick are supposed to get well. Serving them chicken that "looked like plastic painted with shoe polish" is probably not the way to accomplish that.

The quote above comes from a blog post that describes the national effort to improve hospital food, led by Health Care Without Harm:

Today, however, nutrition experts, doctors, hospital administrators, food service companies and patient advocates are working together to make hospital food healthier, better-tasting and a key part of the healing process. Ronald M. Davis, M.D., president of the American Medical Association, in an article for the AMA's April newsletter, called on hospitals to "buy meat and poultry raised without nontherapeutic antibiotics, use milk produced without recombinant bovine growth hormones, and replace unhealthy snacks found in many vending machines with healthy choices."

Gerard Mullin, M.D., director of Integrative GI Nutrition Services at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, points out that "food has biochemical benefits beyond just calories. Having the freshest food available to preserve the bioactivity of those nutrients is very important for healing sick patients."

Hospital food's need for reconstructive surgery has led 127 facilities to sign a pledge to serve primarily organic and chemical-free food, produced locally. Kaiser Permanente, the nation's largest health care system, has adopted similar healthy-food guidelines, declaring that its hospitals will work with local suppliers and other vendors to serve food that is "fresher, tastes better, and is associated with increased consumption of fruits and vegetables."

This effort has spread to hospitals in 21 states, ranging from very small (25 beds) to very large (900 beds). Recently the American Nurses Association also joined in the call for healthier hospital food. Yay!

Jill Richardson :: Hospital Food Gets An Upgrade
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Great to hear! (4.00 / 1)
What distinguishes hospitals from airplanes, though, is that hospitals are places where the sick are supposed to get well. Serving them chicken that "looked like plastic painted with shoe polish" is probably not the way to accomplish that.

Exactly...

This has always been an interest of mine.  I spent 5 weeks in a hospital in 1999 (meningitis), and I really do believe I would have recovered much sooner had I been eating real food during my stay there.  Granted, in 1999 I was still about a year and a half shy of my personal "food awakening"; but even back then I could sense in that situation that good nutrition was an afterthought, if even a 'thought' at all.

"Just shut up and take these drugs!" seemed to be the prevailing mentality, instead...


"The essence of the independent mind lies not in what it thinks, but in how it thinks." - Christopher Hitchens


I think part of it comes from the hospital's (4.00 / 1)
point of view about costs. For a Medicare/Medicaid patient, they get paid based on the patient's diagnosis. So if you have a person with pneumonia and you feed them gourmet, you get the same reimbursement as if you fed them shit. So the question to hospitals is: Is it worth feeding patients good food and will you reap the benefits when they get well faster?

I was thinking about this this weekend. Friday I attended a lecture about how health care billing works. It's pretty sick, and hospitals are really at the mercy of insurance companies. If a patient is very sick and stays in the hospital for a long time running up costs, if the reimbursement the hospital gets is based on the diagnosis, the only thing that hospital can do to recoup its money is give the patient a sicker, more costly diagnosis. But, of course, they can't lie. So... sometimes you make money on a patient, sometimes you lose money. If you're always fighting that battle then feeding the pt more expensive food is a bad idea cost-wise unless it helps the patient get better faster.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman


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