Tuesday, February 11, 2020

On demand hospital food a great idea


From the Chez Rockwell kitchen - sweet n sour beef and veggie stir fry

My relationship with hospital food is limited, as my last extended stay was in the early  80s at the then Northern Carleton Hospital in Bath, NB; incarcerated, trapped for a full month recovering from a dislocated elbow thanks to tripping over a black cat in a darkened hallway in my apartment. Hospitalization was the only viable solution as I could not safely be on my own during recovery; having an out of commission arm compromised my upright mobility within the parameters of living with cerebral palsy. During hospitalized recovery, I would require the same intake of food as I would at home. 

The food wasn’t all that bad, but times are different now, with far too much prepackaged and heat `n’ eat fare that is not terribly appetizing, negatively impacting the hospitalized patient experience.
Before modern medicine, at-home prepared food was the only tool to promote healing or provide comfort. As time passed, there was a separation of food and medicine and food AS medicine.  Modern wellness trends embrace pharmacology and various therapies to enhance the body’s ability to move (physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and so on). What if we came to realize that improved nutrition would reduce pain, improve mood and enhance sleep quality? No miracle drugs required and with proper planning through investigation, eating well isn’t going to break the bank, especially if one breaks bread with others or several others  —friends and cost-shared food is a great prescription for improved health all around.

My own mother took a page from those 19th century notions, filling me up with soups, custards, rice puddings, bread puddings, milkshakes with bananas; the goal was weight gain, as I was diagnosed with ‘failure to thrive’ — one of the many labels attached to infants, toddlers and youngsters growing up with cerebral palsy. Today, I love to cook and bake and I love to eat. My latest thing is a fabulous cabbage and kidney bean soup laden with other healthy veggies. Want the recipe? Get in touch! 

If flavourful soups instead of ‘foods’ that are barely identifiable, were served in hospitals, patients would be more inspired to eat them. There’d be less waste. Think about how much food tray waste there is in hospitals across the province, across the country. Then assign a ballpark dollar value to that waste.  It's no wonder on-demand food service is gaining traction in many provinces across the country. Hospital management in this province has a duty to embrace a better, more palatable model that demonstrates that they really do care about patient health and wellness.

What is food? In my world,  a smoothie is food. In the hospital setting, a veggie and fruit laden smoothie would significantly contribute to stepped up nutrition, particularly for the malnourished senior, who often goes into hospital with compromised nutrition and leaves after ‘recovery’ still malnourished because they just couldn’t eat ‘that horrible hospital food’. When my late husband was a patient at the Chalmers Hospital in Fredericton in 2007, Dr. Sydney Grant asked me to provide them with smoothie recipes, so the staff could introduce them to pique the interest and taste buds of  patients who were struggling to eat.
Food offerings need not be constrained by time of day. In the absence of dietary restrictions, if Mr. Jones wants a salad and smoothie for breakfast, that’s what he should have. If Mrs. Brown wants a bowl of oatmeal and a side of toast and peanut butter for dinner, she should have it, no questions asked. She might even enjoy apple slices with a few pieces of chocolate on the side. Making real, palatable, fresh foods available will reduce the numbers of the malnourished. Rule of thumb: fresh is best. On-demand food service WILL cut costs and improve patient outcomes. The number of malnourished will decrease. Education about nutrition can be structured so patients can take home with them tricks and tips for healthy eating post-hospitalization. That practice alone would contribute to reducing repeat admissions, therefore reducing costs.

It’s time for the powers that be to look to better ways to DO good medicine and that includes food offerings. Healthy eating is part of recovery from trauma to the body, whether through illness or during post-op healing, so we really are what we eat. If we don’t like what we ate at our local hospital, we must communicate our concerns to effect change. After all, our money helps pay the bills.

Carla MacInnis Rockwell is a freelance writer and disability rights advocate living outside Fredericton, NB with her geriatric Australian silky terrier and a rambunctious Maltese. She can be reached via email at carmacrockwell@xplornet.ca



2 comments:

  1. Outstanding, Carla. Whenever my hips start barking at me, I ramp up the fruits and veggies and cut back meat. Works every time. I'm with you on this.

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