OPINION:
There must be better ways of saving money in our health system than trying to slash the budget for hospital food.
Unhealthy food is the leading cause of ill-health in New Zealand,
with many people ending up in hospital as a result of poor eating habits
and consuming too much processed, mass-produced, industrial food.
That's why giving hospital patients good quality, fresh food should
be an integral part of healthcare and helping patients recuperate.
Good food provides the nutrients patients need to help them recover
from illness. If patients don't get good food and are given cheap, poor
quality, inedible food instead, they won't get the nutrients they need
and will probably take longer to recuperate.
But instead of making healthy food a priority, the Government is
proposing to cut the budget for hospital food by $10 million to $18
million a year by centralising some hospital food production, and giving
global catering giant Compass a 15-year contract to make much of the
food for New Zealand's hospitals from two central hubs in Auckland and
Christchurch.
The mass-produced, pre-cooked factory food will be frozen, delivered
to hospitals around New Zealand, reheated and served to patients.
The proposal is not driven by patient needs. It is driven by the
need to cut costs in the health system. The Government has told district
health boards they must cut about $700 million from the health budget
over the next five years.
It has set up a board, Health Benefits Ltd, to find ways of doing this, and the board has come up with this bright idea.
The Government claims that slashing hospital food budgets won't reduce the quality of hospital food, but few believe this.
Compass already supplies food to various North Island hospitals, and
kitchen staff report that it uses a lot of imported food - cheap,
tasteless catfish from Vietnam, for example, or potatoes imported from
the Netherlands.
I doubt there will be many nutrients left in food imported from the
other side of the world, pre-cooked, frozen, then reheated and served up
to a week later.
The silly thing is that centralising hospital food production has been tried before, and it was a spectacular failure.
In 1993, the government shut down hospital kitchens in Northland,
Taranaki, Rotorua, and Southland, and contracted an Australian company
called Tempo to produce all their hospital food in a kitchen located in
the grounds of the Porirua psychiatric hospital.
Huge savings were promised, but after three years Tempo went bust.
The company blamed its failure on an unrealistically low price for meals
that had been negotiated, which, it claimed, could never be achieved.
The same thing could easily happen again, as no hard data has been made available to justify the huge projected savings.
More than eight million hospital meals are made each year. If
Compass miscalculated the savings it could make on hospital meals by
even a small amount, as the earlier contractor did, the savings may
never eventuate.
There are other risks. A huge variety of special diets is needed for hospital patients.
Diabetics and people with allergies need special diets, as do
patients suffering from various illnesses. Tracking and retrieving all
this food is extremely complex, and if patients were given the wrong
food, there could be serious health consequences.
Then there are the risks of delays in transporting food, if bad weather closes roads, or there was a natural disaster.
At present some hospitals source much of their food locally. Under
the new proposal, a lot of locally grown food would be trucked to
Auckland or Christchurch, cooked and then trucked back again to local
areas. How practical is that?
And I can't help wondering whether the additional administrative and
transport costs of trucking all this food around New Zealand have been
properly calculated, along with indirect costs such as the increased
number of trucks on our roads?
Instead of centralising food production in Auckland and
Christchurch, it would be far more sensible and sustainable if hospitals
bought fresh, locally produced food and made it in-house, as some
already do.
Buying and producing food locally would help ensure that as much hospital food as possible was fresh and healthy.
I would therefore urge the Government to scrap this particular
cost-cutting initiative and look elsewhere for savings. The best way to
reduce hospital budgets would be to reinstate public health initiatives,
such as healthy food in schools, that would reduce the numbers of
people ending up in hospital in the first instance.
source
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
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