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Do hospitals legitimise junk food? 
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-21517863
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The "obesity crisis" in the UK has again made headlines this week. A report by the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges called for a range of measures from taxing sugary drinks to improving food in hospitals. A report by the group Sustain has also called for hospital food to meet mandatory nutritional standards. In the week's Scrubbing Up, Dr Aseem Malhotra argues that hospitals must lead by example.

It is demoralising to observe patients on daily ward rounds gorging on burgers, crisps, and chocolates, washed down with a sugary drink - the very food items that contributed to their admission in the first place. When I recently told a heart attack survivor in his 50s that the can of coke he was drinking contained nine teaspoons of sugar, he replied "you sold it to me".

Like most clinicians I find it really quite appalling that many hospitals continue to have high street fast food franchises on site as well as corridors littered with vending machines selling junk food. This sends out the wrong message and legitimises unhealthy food. A study in the US found that families that made out patient paediatric visits were four times more likely to eat junk food (at any time of the day) if they visited a hospital with a fast food restaurant on site.

By legitimising the acceptability of junk food, hospitals have become a risk factor for obesity and diet related disease.

Drinks ban


There are a few beacons of good practice. The Royal Brompton Hospital in London is a prime example where a team led by chief caterer Mike Duckett has worked to use their budgets to provide meals using fresh seasonal produce. The Royal Bolton Hospital has successfully managed to not only ban the sale of large bottles of sugary drinks within the hospital grounds, but has improved the availability of healthy options in the hospital canteen by introducing a traffic light labelling system.

Of course patients deserve to be given nutritious meals, but hospital staff are also suffering from serious weight problems. A recent report from the Royal College of Physicians revealed that half of the 1.4 million people who work for the NHS are obese. Education alone is an ineffective strategy in tackling obesity and the food environment has a much greater impact on our eating habits than we give it credit for.

So why have we allowed hospitals to remain a branding opportunity for the junk food industry? The common argument that chief executives and senior managers use to defend such practice is that the revenue from the sale of such products is used to "save lives". But we don't sell alcohol to treat liver disease or cigarettes to treat lung cancer because it would be considered unacceptable.

Smoking parallels

In my view the smoking ban in public places was the greatest health legacy of the last Labour government. Admissions to hospital due to asthma have halved and death rates from heart diseases have significantly reduced.

Under threat of regulation, food corporations make promises to behave better and proclaim their introduction of healthier options. But even the ones marketed as "low fat" or "cholesterol lowering" are loaded with sugar which the latest evidence suggests is the most potent driver of obesity. These companies have not promised to sell less junk food and find ever more creative ways of marketing foods to vulnerable populations, especially children.

It's therefore no surprise that last week the Lancet accused multinational food, drink, and alcohol industries of using similar strategies to the tobacco industry to undermine public health policies and suggested they should be regulated. A government strategy of collaboration with the industry was described by one commentator as akin to asking a "burglar to install your locks".

There is no magic pill or silver bullet that is able to deal with the increasing burden of obesity and its related diseases which is costing the NHS £6bn each year. Fatalism, pessimism, cynicism and complacency all support the status quo despite the fact that changes to lifestyle can have profound benefits to health even in the short term.

Politicians and the public have to decide for themselves whether they prefer to listen to the food corporations who are incentivised by profit or the voice of NHS doctors and health campaigners whose only motive is to protect your health. It is time to regulate against the excesses and manipulations of the food industry to save lives and we must start in our own back yard.

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 9:11 am
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Having worked in various hospitals, I can report the following:

  • Hospitals have sold spaces to shops, which stock the usual crisps, sweets, chocolates and fizzy drinks.
  • These same shops (or the WRVS) go round the wards offering newspapers, chocolates, crisps and sweets to patients.
  • I have yet to see any fruit or healthy options sold in the shops or on the trolleys
  • Hospitals make money by renting (or selling, not sure which) space out to the likes of Burger King and McDonalds. You often see them in the foyer section of the hospital as you walk in.
  • Patients/relatives often thank nurses with boxes of chocolates and biscuits. This has led to a "quality street syndrome" amongst some nurses who sit at their desks all day and eat sweets, thereby gaining weight.
  • As a doctor, I was often rushed off my feet. There was no "protected lunch break" for me. I almost always worked through the lunch hour and this was certainly the case when I was on-call especially over the weekends.
  • The canteens provide variable standards of food depending on the hospital. I've been to some where it's an awesome feast and you have healthy options, unhealthy options, freshly made sandwiches, prepacked stuff etc in addition to the usual crisps/drinks/sweets. I've been to some where they basically sell just junk food.

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 9:21 am
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I've not noticed any "junk food" in our local hospital, but then I don't go looking for it. I do spend quite a lot of time there as a patient. I'm in again on Wednesday so I'll see if there's any obvious "pushers" of said horrors.

The last meals I had on a ward were basic English style like chicken, mash and veg. Not great, but reasonably balanced.

The last time I ate in their canteen I had a prawn sandwich, fruit juice and a fruit salad. I didn't notice what the hot food available was, but there was the usual choice of drinks you get everywhere - tea, coke, water and whatever. Just because they sold coke didn't mean I bought it.

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 11:41 am
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My local hospital does have an WRVS shop that sells typical newsagent stuff - chocolates and crisps - but, IIRC, does also sell fresh fruit and fruit juices. The meals in the wards are basic but they're not 'junk food' - they tend to be cereals or toast for breakfast, sandwiches and fruit/yoghurt for lunch and a stew/casserole type dish with vegetables for evening meal. Boiled to death vegetables admittedly, but they're making some effort at least...

There's also a rather decent canteen for staff and visitors. It's a canteen but the food is well above what you'd expect. It's hidden away though and not well signposted for some reason (no reason they should hide it - you pay for the food you eat after all).


Mon Feb 25, 2013 4:03 pm
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Who are they to tell me what I should eat when I visit someone? Offer healthy food by all means, but don't ban everything else.

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:15 pm
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l3v1ck wrote:
Who are they to tell me what I should eat when I visit someone? Offer healthy food by all means, but don't ban everything else.

Isn't that exactly like demanding meat at a vegetarian festival, or Cornish Pasty in an Italian restaurant? Hospitals are not in the junk food business, so why should they listen if you demand they sell it? Even more ridiculous when it's possibly going to give them more work when you get ill later in life.

If you want to eat that stuff then take it with you.

On a similar vain, I think the vending machines were removed from our local schools for the same reason. It doesn't stop people bringing their own, but it does mean it's not in people's face all the time. I know it's pandering to the weak and irresponsible, but some people - especially kids - are prone to suggestion.

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:29 pm
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I was surprised the first time I saw a Burger King outlet in the foyer of Southampton General. If that isn't legitimising junk food, what is?

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 8:49 pm
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Spreadie wrote:
I was surprised the first time I saw a Burger King outlet in the foyer of Southampton General. If that isn't legitimising junk food, what is?

They should be banned but the problem is that trusts will open other unhealthy options as they need the rental income. If it were not Burger King then it could be McDonalds, KFC or a tobacconist.

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 10:03 pm
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Spreadie wrote:
I was surprised the first time I saw a Burger King outlet in the foyer of Southampton General. If that isn't legitimising junk food, what is?

That's my training ground through med school. I think ate there on average twice a year. The canteen downstairs was very good.

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Mon Feb 25, 2013 10:23 pm
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It doesn't seem like that has reached Germany yet, at least not in the province hospitals where I've been.

In Bramsche and Damme, the hospitals have healthy, balanced meals in the wards (wards are generally rooms for 1 - 3 people here). You get bottled water delivered to the bed, as much as you want. You also get tea and coffee delivered a couple of times a day after meals.

They have a canteen, which serves freshly made cakes, tea and coffee, plus a small selection of chocolate bars. For more substantial meals during the peak times, they server the same nourishing meals as the patients get.

AFAIK, they are not allowed to rent out space to fast food restaurants etc.

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Tue Feb 26, 2013 5:35 am
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big_D wrote:
AFAIK, they are not allowed to rent out space to fast food restaurants etc.

That is probably a good thing. Our government think that the free market is the only way and so no restrictions on what they do is allowed.

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Tue Feb 26, 2013 12:57 pm
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JJW009 wrote:
l3v1ck wrote:
Who are they to tell me what I should eat when I visit someone? Offer healthy food by all means, but don't ban everything else.

Isn't that exactly like demanding meat at a vegetarian festival, or Cornish Pasty in an Italian restaurant? Hospitals are not in the junk food business, so why should they listen if you demand they sell it? Even more ridiculous when it's possibly going to give them more work when you get ill later in life.

If you want to eat that stuff then take it with you.

On a similar vain, I think the vending machines were removed from our local schools for the same reason. It doesn't stop people bringing their own, but it does mean it's not in people's face all the time. I know it's pandering to the weak and irresponsible, but some people - especially kids - are prone to suggestion.

For visitors they aren't in the food business full stop. You can't choose which hospital to visit friends and family at like you can choose a restaurant.

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