Quantifying the locality of the food supply in a large healthcare organisation.

Nutr Diet

Dietetics Department, Mater Health, South Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The research investigates how external shocks (like extreme weather, wars, and pandemics) impact hospital food systems and aims to enhance food supply security by sourcing ingredients locally.
  • The study is observational and focuses on a large healthcare organization in Queensland, Australia, analyzing the country of origin for food items purchased over a year.
  • Results show that while 53% of the food budget was spent on Australian products, the procurement of local (Queensland-grown) fresh fruits, vegetables, and meats was lower, highlighting areas for improvement in local sourcing strategies.

Article Abstract

Aim: Shocks to the food system (such as extreme weather events, wars, and pandemics) are felt by institutional food systems. For hospitals, these shocks affect the quantity, quality, and variety of foods that can be offered to patients. One strategy to buffer the hospital food supply from external threats is to prioritise ingredients produced locally. Thus, the aim of the current research is to describe the country of origin of all foods purchased by a large, metropolitan healthcare organisation and to identify opportunities for improving the locality of the food supply.

Methods: This study was of a cross-sectional, observational design. The country of origin for all foods procured over a 1-year period by a large, urban healthcare organisation was determined by proportion of food budget spend. State of origin was identified for fresh fruit, vegetables, and meat. The organisation was in Queensland, Australia and utilised a cook-fresh, room-service foodservice model. Descriptive analysis was used to to determine the number of items and the proportion of budget spend on all foods produced in Australia, and by food category. Similar descriptive statistics were generated to determine the proportion of the budget spend on fresh fruits, vegetables and meats produced in Queensland.

Results: Over the 1-year period, 659 individual food items were purchased by the hospital foodservice, and 502 food items were included in the anlaysis. In total, 53% of the food budget was spent on Australian foods (100% Australian ingredients) and almost all fruit (73%) and vegetables (91%) were Australian grown. Procuring fresh fruit (28%), vegetables (35%), and meat (46%) from within the state was less common, and this may reflect the primary states of production across Australia, and seasonal variability of the food supply.

Conclusions: Findings offer priority areas for improving the locality of the food supply. Future research to determine if procuring more foods locally has benefits to consistency of the food supply is warranted.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1747-0080.12898DOI Listing

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