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The Current

Hospital food has a bad reputation. A chef reimagined it with a focus on healing

Vancouver General Hospital launched a six-month pilot project with chef Ned Bell to overhaul the facility's meals and deliver a healthier, tastier menu.

Vancouver hospital pilot project introduced more than 20 new meals aimed at getting patients to eat

A shot of Korean gochujang bowl, surrounded by bowls of cauliflower and grapes, as well as glasses of milk and coffee.
This Korean gochujang bowl is one of more than 20 meals created by celebrity chef Ned Bell for Vancouver General Hospital's Planetary Health Menu Pilot Project. Project co-lead Dr. Annie Lalande says that patients reacted positively to the dishes. (Leila Kwok/Vancouver Coastal Health)

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You might be familiar with some of the less-than-appetizing meals that get served in hospital if you, or a loved one, has ever had an extended stay.

But a recentpilot project at a Vancouver hospital aimed to replace unappealing mush with something that's both appetizing and nutritious.

"There's starting to be more recognition of the role that food plays in recovery," said Dr. Annie Lalande, a surgery resident at Vancouver General Hospital.

"It's such an important part of healing. It's such an important part of the patient experience," she told The Current's Matt Galloway.

Vancouver General Hospital partnered with celebrity chef and TV personality Ned Bell to offer more than 20 new menu items in an effortto encourage more hospital patients to eat.

Called the Planetary Health Menu Pilot Project, Bell dove into this "important" work when the opportunity presented itself.

"I think the power of food is something that we need to harness in health care," he told Galloway. "Isort ofthink of it as food care. Thatsort ofis one of the arms of the octopus of health care before it then turns into sick care."

Ned Bell (left), Dr. Annie Lalande (centre) and Tiffany Chiang are the co-leads of Vancouver General Hospital's Planetary Health Menu Pilot Project.
Chef Ned Bell, left, Lalande, centre, and food service director Tiffany Chiang, right, co-led Vancouver General Hospital's meal pilot project. (Leila Kwok/Vancouver Coastal Health)

The pilot ended in March and ran for six months.An in-depth analysis is underway to identify which menu changes hadthe greatest impact on patient satisfaction, as well as quantify the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions during the project.

Lalande, who co-leadsthe project, says the patients she spoke with were generally pleased with the options that were served.

"We've had patients telling us that they were looking forward to the meals, that they noticed the difference, that they thought the new flavours were exciting and overall that this improved their experience," she said.

WATCH |Unappealing and bland: Patients say hospital food unacceptable:

Unappealing and bland: Patients say hospital food unacceptable

2 years ago
Duration 1:56
A relative of a man recently hospitalized in Winnipeg says patients are being served unappetizing meals, and he questions whether they meet the nutritional needs of people recovering from illness or injury.

Encouraging eating

The main goal of the project was to encourage more patients to eat the food being served to them.

"A lot of our patients weren't eating a lot," Lalande said.

"If you don't have much of an appetite, and the food doesn't speak to you, then you don't tend to eat as much, and that certainly has impacts on recovery."

A South Asian-inspired chickpea curry with cashews and mango chutney.
A South Asian-inspired chickpea curry with cashews and mango chutney. (Leila Kwok/Vancouver Coastal Health)

Bell saw this first hand when his wife was a cancer patient in 2019. He was disappointed both as a chef and as her caregiver to feed her some of the meals she was given.

"It left a lot to be desired, whether visually or generally ...do I want to eat this, because I'm not feeling great," he said.

Chef Joshna Maharaj, who wasn't involved in the Vancouver pilot but has done similar work since 2011, calls the average hospital dish a "dismal scenario all around."

"We just thaw things out and then sometimes attempt to prop that food up with cornstarch slurry, just to add some texture," she told Galloway.

She said the food is usually unappetizing and unhealthy.

"There were times where I would look at this whole tray of not-awesome food and say, 'We'd be better off giving patients 250 milligrams of chicken broth and an apple rather than this whole parade of food that is not doing the job,'" she said.

Toronto-based chef and activist Joshna Maharaj.
Toronto-based chef and activist Joshna Maharaj says food served to hospital patients is a 'dismal scenario all around.' (Submitted)

But getting patients to eat wasn't as simple as replacing the food with a gourmet meal. Lalande says the pilot's menu had to find a balance between taste and nutrition to suit hospital patients at varying stages of health.

That includes patients who might be feeling nauseous or are recovering from surgery and can't stomach a flavourful meal.

"On the other end of the spectrum, you're trying to feed people or provide food for people who have recovered and might be feeling up for a more adventurous meal," Leland said.

They also wanted to inspire how people looked at food once they're discharged from the hospital.

"If we can inspire people to cook new dishes, to try new things and to take that with them when they go home, that's one way that we can really try to improve the health of our communities in general," she said.

Choice of cuisine

There were complexities beyond food to chew on, including cost and a lack of labour, said Bell.

When building the menu, Bell said the recipes had to be functional. They also had to be executed efficiently with the dozens of hospital kitchen staff and equipment already on hand.

A steelhead trout with tomato miso dressing.
Another of Bell's dishes, steelhead trout with tomato miso dressing, was served as part of the pilot project. (Leila Kwok/Vancouver Coastal Health)

"They're not restaurant chefs. The equipment is not modern," he said.

"Also the equipment is significantly large. You know, cooking pasta for 900 [people] at the same time is really difficult to do well, and we did our best."

Some of the team's toprecipes included roasted steelhead trout with tomato miso vinaigrette, as well as experimentations with old classics, such as sloppy joes and turkey bolognese.

They also offeredplant-based options and dishes from other cultures, such as South Asian-inspired coconut curry, a Thai noodle bowl and Korean gochujang.

Lalande said it was important to give patients a diverse array of meals over the six-month pilot, as opposed to one specific option each mealtime.

"Food only matters and only counts if it's eaten. So it's important that we provide food that patients want to eat that meets their needs [not] only from a purely nutritional standpoint, but from a cultural perspective," she said.

Produced by Anne Penman