Enhancing food sustainability in the acute hospital setting - a nurse-led study of patient food.

Suzy Clare Moody
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Abstract

Background: Intensive global food production causes soil, water and air pollution, which has a negative impact on our health and future ability to produce sufficient nutritious food. Plant-based diets have the potential to reduce the environmental damage associated with the global food chain.

Aims: The project sought to understand drivers of food waste and to improve food sustainability in a busy, tertiary referral hospital in England.

Methods: Ward-level food waste was quantified. Qualitative data were collected using informal interviews with staff and additional data utilised the patient feedback survey. Ward-level food packaging waste and patient food choices were quantified using data on patient menu choices. The carbon footprint of patient food choices was calculated.

Findings: Beef was the most popular menu choice, and was the main contributing factor to the high environmental impact of the hospital food chain. Increasing the visibility of vegetarian options on the menu led to a four-fold rise in these meals being chosen, which reduced the carbon footprint of the patient meal service. Recycling food packaging was also started, but there are challenges to widespread implementation.

Conclusion: The project was successful, but it remains a starting point from which to increase food sustainability across the NHS and care sector catering provision.

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加强急症医院的食品可持续性--一项由护士主导的病人食品研究。
背景:全球密集型食品生产造成了土壤、水和空气污染,对我们的健康和未来生产充足营养食品的能力产生了负面影响。以植物为基础的饮食有可能减少全球食物链对环境造成的破坏。目的:该项目旨在了解造成食物浪费的原因,并改善英格兰一家繁忙的三级转诊医院的食物可持续性:方法:对医院层面的食物浪费进行量化。定性数据通过与员工的非正式访谈收集,其他数据则通过患者反馈调查收集。利用患者菜单选择的数据,对病区的食品包装浪费和患者的食物选择进行量化。计算了病人食物选择的碳足迹:牛肉是最受欢迎的菜单选择,也是造成医院食物链对环境影响较大的主要因素。提高菜单上素食选项的能见度后,选择素食的人数增加了四倍,从而减少了病人膳食服务的碳足迹。此外,还开始回收食品包装,但要广泛实施还面临挑战:该项目是成功的,但它仍然是一个起点,在此基础上才能提高整个国家医疗服务体系和护理部门餐饮服务的食品可持续性。
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