Something to Chew on; Plate-Waste at an Ontario Veteran's Centre.

IF 0.7 4区 医学 Q4 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Canadian Journal of Dietetic Practice and Research Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-04 DOI:10.3148/cjdpr-2024-007
Colleen Miller, Julia Taylor, Ruby Tong, Samantha Thompson, Emily Thomson, Ann Robertson, Rosine Bishara
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Abstract

There is paucity of data assessing levels of food/beverage waste in long-term care (LTC) facilities, especially in Ontario. Observations in the Veteran's Centre (VC) at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre (Sunnybrook) indicated food/beverage waste may be high, potentially impacting sustainability efforts within our institution. Before proceeding with waste reduction efforts, we conducted a comprehensive 3-day waste-audit of food/beverage items provided to VC residents with the goal of understanding the extent of food/beverage waste at VC, items wasted, and any other factors that may inform future changes. Our results indicate that 28% of items served to residents were wasted. Lunch was the meal with greatest waste at 31% and waste of solid items was 12% higher than that of liquids. We observed a large variability in waste between residents and within each resident, with 15% of residents wasting >50% of items provided. This study provides a deeper insight into the magnitude of food/beverage waste in a LTC population and highlights the importance of considering individualized strategies to address waste to avoid negative impact on residents.

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安大略退伍军人中心的餐盘垃圾
评估长期护理(LTC)机构,尤其是安大略省长期护理机构的食物/饮料浪费程度的数据很少。桑尼布鲁克健康科学中心(Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre)退伍军人中心(VC)的观察结果表明,食物/饮料浪费可能很严重,可能会影响我们机构内的可持续发展工作。在开展减少浪费的工作之前,我们对提供给 VC 居民的食品/饮料进行了为期 3 天的全面浪费审计,目的是了解 VC 食品/饮料浪费的程度、浪费的物品以及可能影响未来变化的任何其他因素。我们的结果表明,为住户提供的食物/饮料中有 28% 被浪费。午餐的浪费率最高,达到 31%,固体食物的浪费率比液体食物高出 12%。我们观察到,不同住户之间以及每位住户内部的浪费情况差异很大,15% 的住户浪费了超过 50% 的食物。这项研究让我们更深入地了解了在长期护理人群中食物/饮料浪费的严重程度,并强调了考虑采取个性化策略解决浪费问题以避免对居民造成负面影响的重要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
38
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal considers manuscripts for publication that focus on applied food and nutrition research with direct application to the Canadian healthcare system and other contributions relevant to Canadian dietetic practice. The Journal does not publish market research studies, author opinions or animal studies. Manuscripts may be in English or French.
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