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Food Day Finds Health Care Serving Up Healthier, Sustainable Foods

Contact: Eileen Secrest 540-376-4495
Reston, VA — NOTE FOR REPORTERS: Food Day is October 24. Hospitals across the nation have begun to implement healthier, more sustainable food service programs with the support and encouragement of Health Care Without Harm’s (HCWH) Healthy Food in Health Care (HFHC) Campaign . The campaign is marking Food Day by celebrating accomplishments in sustainability being made in hospital food services across the country. Food Day is a nationwide celebration and a movement for healthy, affordable, and sustainable food.
Because the purchasing power of health care systems is enormous, the
decisions health-care institutions make about food can have a
substantial impact on public and environmental health. By adopting food
procurement policies that are environmentally sound and socially
responsible, health care institutions can protect the health of workers,
patients and communities, and they can have a positive impact on the
ecological health of the planet.
"At Beaumont Hospital, we’re committed to sourcing and sustaining a
healthy food environment for people to be able to make good choices from
the patient menu, the cafeteria and even the vending machines. As a Healthy Food Pledge
signer, our health system is working to source local, sustainable
foods, purchase healthier beverages and reduce the amount of meat served
to protect human and environmental health," said Christine Eagle,
clinical nutrition manager, Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, MI.
This year, the Campaign surveyed hospitals from around the country to
see what initiatives are making a difference; more than seventy-five
hospitals participated. Overall, many health care sites emphasized
recent efforts to increase sustainable food procurement and healthy food
availability, promote sustainable food programming such as on-site
farmers markets, gardens, and community supported agriculture (CSA)
shares, and reduce food service waste.
In California, the Community Alliance with Family Farmers is now
successfully selling to three hospitals in the Bay Area. “This summer,
these hospitals regionally sourced 721 pounds of local, organic
strawberries, 3830 pounds of local green beans, and 1440 pounds of local
stone fruit,” says Lucia Sayre, Co-Coordinator of Healthy Food in
Health Care Campaign and Food Matters
Program. Hospitals and local NGOs in California have developed the
Regional Produce Purchasing Project to help increase the availability of
sustainable, local produce through increasing the market share
dedicated to sourcing food from family farms.
Other purchasing efforts have exploded in Maryland through the Buy Local
Challenge. “Participation in this Challenge is a great way for
hospitals to engage their entire communities in thinking about the
choices we make about our food,” says Louise Mitchell, Mid-Atlantic
sustainable foods program manager. “The Challenge can be a first step
towards hospitals changing their long-term buying habits; in just the
week of this Challenge, these hospitals spent more than $53,000 on foods
from local farmers. Also, most of the 54 hospitals who took this year’s
Challenge are now buying local fruits and vegetables throughout the
year and 11 are buying local sustainable beef and/or poultry regularly.”
This region also noted 23 health care facilities in Maryland and DC,
and 2 in Virginia are among more than 396 hospitals nationwide that have
signed the Healthy Food in Health Care Pledge, another good starting
point for hospitals.
Additionally, the Healthy Food in Health Care Campaign creates
challenges and
accompanies them with tool and resources to support
hospitals in making the transition- like the Healthy Beverages Initiative or Balanced Menus
Challenge. The later asks hospitals to commit to reducing meat and
poultry purchases by 20 percent. "It's not a one-size-fits-all
challenge,” says Kathy Pryor, the Food Work Group's co-lead of on the
Balanced Menus project. “Even hospitals that weren't able to achieve a
20 percent reduction were able to get their cafeteria meals more in line
with federal dietary recommendations.” “[Hospitals] used their cost
savings...to buy items they wanted more of, like sustainably-raised
meat, produce, or dairy."
To support hospitals in their commitment, goal setting, and tracking for
sustainability initiatives in the kitchen the HFHC Campaign has
recently teamed up with the Healthier Hospitals Initiative (HHI) to
create the Healthier Food Challenge.
HHI, a national sustainability agenda for the health care sector,
supports enrolled hospitals and health systems in setting goals and
tracking progress in several areas of sustainable operations. By
taking this free challenge, healthcare facilities join other leading
hospitals that recognize the opportunity to improve the health of their
customers (employees, patients, and visitors) and the health of the
environment. To date over 150 hospitals across the country have
enrolled in the HHI Healthier Food Challenge.
In addition to regionally tracking the progress of sustainable food service in the health care sector, HCWH conducts the HFHC National Survey & Awards Program
bi-annually. According to 2011 survey & awards coordinator Hillary
Bisnett, “Our awards program does more than just recognize significant
achievement and leadership among the hospitals working on the
initiatives, it spurs competition to achieve measurable, lasting results
and encourages continuous improvement with an emphasis on quantitative
versus qualitative results.” The next survey is set to take place in
January of 2013, and the Awards Ceremony will take place at the HCWH
national CleanMed Conference on April 24-26, 2013 in Boston, MA.
The Healthy Food in Health Care (HFHC) Program is a national initiative
of Health Care Without Harm (HCWH), developed in conjunction with its
member organizations, which mobilizes advocates to work with hospitals
across the country to help improve the sustainability of their food
services. The program provides education, tools, resources, and support
to health care facilities making the connection between the health of
their patients, staff and community and the food they serve. For more
information about the HCWH Healthy Food in Health Care Program, visit
www.healthyfoodinhealthcare.org.
Heath Care without Harm, an international coalition of more than 500 organizations in 53 countries, is working to transform the health care sector, without compromising patient safety or care, so that it is ecologically sustainable and no longer a source of harm to public health and the environment. To learn more about HCWH's work, visit our website at www.noharm.org, our YouTube channel at HCwithoutharm, and our twitter feed at hcwithoutharm.



