The document discusses hospital catering services. It provides details on core objectives and services of a catering department including menu planning, material management, costing, and food safety. It outlines the roles and responsibilities of catering staff. The document also discusses challenges around staffing and proposes remedial measures. Key performance indicators for evaluating catering services are presented. The conclusion emphasizes the importance of identifying patient nutritional needs, effective communication, and continual quality improvement.
1. Assignment Topic : Catering Services
Group Members of EPGDHA Batch 2013-2014
1. Dr. Susan Fernandes
2. Dr. Allan Pereira
3. Dr. Sreya Joseph
4. Mrs. Elizabeth David
5. Ms. Diana Vincent
6. Mr. Tapan Doshi
7. Mr. Sameer Shinde
2. Hospital Catering Services
Hospital catering services are an essential part of patient care.
Good-quality, nutritious meals play a vital part in patients’ rehabilitation &
recovery, & limit the unnecessary use of nutritional supplements.
Hospital catering services should be cost effective & flexible enough to
provide a good choice of nutritious meals that can accommodate patients’
specific dietary requirements & preferences.
3. Core Objectives of Catering Department
1. Control catering budget & contract: food, beverages & snacks
2. Choose & order ingredients .
3. Develop Recipes, menu’s taking into consideration dietetic advice,
patients age, culture, religion & medical condition.
4. Prepare food to Quality approved standards
5. Deliver food to wards, patients & staff restaurants
6. Serve food to patients at ward level (Nurses/ Hostesses)
7. Provide snacks
8. Maintain & supervise food hygiene at all times.
9. Consider development of patient restaurants or other novel food
delivery / outlets.
10. Control cost & monitor waste
11. Audit &develop service delivery
6. An Open Floor Plan Layout of Catering
Department for a Hospital
7. Location & Size
The Catering Service Department should ideally be in the
ground floor
Away from normal traffic flow.
Access to trolleys & lorries coming to unload regular
supplies.
The area requirement for the kitchen varies as per the type &
size of the hospital.
1. Upto 200beds = 20sqft/bed
2. 200- 400 beds = 16sqft/bed
3. 500 & above = 15sqft/bed
8. Additional Physical Facilities
Physical facilities can be divided into two components:
Peripheral component
1. Collection of diet demand
2. Distribution of diet
Central component
1. Administrative area
2. Cooking area
3. Preparation area
4. Service area
5. Receiving area
6. Dry Ration storage
7. Cold rooms for perishable food items
8. Garbage collection area
9. Toilets
10. Washing Area
a. Dish Washing area
b. Trolley Washing area
12. The diagram is used to show where groups such as the Nutrition
support team & the Hospital steering committee sit in this structure
13. Organogram
Medical Superintendent
CMO I/C Kitchen Chief Dietician
Senior Dietician
Dietician
Steward
Store
Keeper
Clerk
Head
Cook
Dietician
Head Cook
Assistant
Cook
Masalchi
Trolley
Bearer
Store
attendant
Cleaner
Cook
Additional Medical Superintendent
14. Staffing : Differs as per the size of the Hospital.10-30%
extra for the casual leave
Sr. No Type of staff 300 bedded 500 bedded 750 & above
1 Chief Dietician 0 0 1
2 Senior Dietician 0 0 1
3 Dietician 1 1 1
4 Assistant Dietician 3 5 7
5 Steward 1 1 1
6 Diet Clerk 0 1 1
7 Head Cook 1 1 1
8 Therapeutic cooks 2 2 3
9 Cooks 8 10 16
10 Assistant Cooks 6 8 10
11 Masalchi 6 8 10
12 Store Attendant 1 2 2
13 Trolley Bearer 8 10 16
14 Cleaner 2 2 3
15. Roles & Responsibilities of Staff
Chief & Senior Dieticians:
1. Making Policies regarding indents, standardization, Quality control, Receipt,
Issue & Disposal.
2. Supervisory record keeping, Physical Stock verification
3. Menu Planning, Budget Planning & Cost Accounting
4. Diet Counseling , Diet charts Education & Training
5. House Keeping & Sanitation
6. Personnel Management & preparation of therapeutic diets
7. Uniforms, work schedule, time of food delivery
8. Supervision of personal hygiene of staff, cleanliness of cooking & serving area
Steward:
1. Over all supervision and control of kitchen activities.
2. Preparation of diet demands
3. Collection of ration from stores for cooking
4. Supervision of food distribution in wards
5. General sanitation & Hygiene of kitchen
16. Roles & Responsibilities of Staff
Store Keeper:
1. Indent & receipt of dry & wet rations.
2. Proper storing of ration & perishable items in cold storage area.
3. Accounting, issuing & record keeping.
4. Pest control.
Head Cook:
1. Over all supportive supervision of cooks.
2. Kitchen hygiene & Food Quality.
3. Checks pilferage
4. Receipts of kitchen supplies eg: chicken, bread, Eggs, vegetables.
5. Maintaining Kitchen discipline
Assistant Cook:
1. Distribution of raw materials, food to different places
2. Assist in preparation, cooking, grinding, peeling, grinding
3. Assist in cleaning & drying utensils.
Masalchi:
1. Maintenance of cleaning in kitchen area.
2. Washing of utensils
3. Proper Disposal of waste
Cooks:
1. Preparation of general & therapeutic diets
21. Dietary Service Management
Management
Diet & Menu
planning
Quality
Control
Financial
Management
Personnel
Management
Food
Management
Equipment
management
Raw
material
management
Area
management
22. Food & Nutrition
Eating well is important for everyone’s health, well or ill.
Providing appropriate nutrition in the hospital setting is a
particularly challenging task due to the diverse dietary
needs of the population.
Food in Hospitals is one important part of an integrated
programme for improving nutritional care in hospitals. It
is fundamental that hospitals provide appropriate food,
fluid & nutritional care to manage any nutritional risk, to
improve nutritional health, well-being & optimise the
wider clinical management of all patients.
Food not only needs to meet individual nutritional
requirements, should be appropriate for different age
groups, religious, cultural & social backgrounds and
different medical conditions.
The diversity of nutritional needs within the hospital
setting has two sets of nutrient-based standards:
1. Standards recognising those patients who are
‘nutritionally vulnerable’(those with poor appetites,
increased risk of malnutrition) who require a diet that is
energy & nutrient-dense.
2. The other standards acknowledge ‘nutritionally well’
patients, whose needs are in-line with the healthy
balanced diet.
23. Recognizing Patient Needs
When a person is admitted to hospital, an
assessment is carried out, both on
admission & on an ongoing basis. A care
plan is developed, implemented &
evaluated as follows:
1. Eating and drinking likes & dislikes
2. Food allergies & need for therapeutic diet
3. Cultural/ethnic/religious requirements
4. Social/environmental mealtime
requirements
5. Physical difficulties with eating &
drinking
6. The need for equipment to help with
eating & drinking
24. Menu Planning
Diet
Soft Diet
Diabetic Diet
Liquid Diet
Nephrotic DietHigh Calorie DietHigh Protein Diet
Distribution
timings
(7:00, 8:30, 12:00,
16:00, 19:00)
General Full Diet
25. Menu Planning
Menus should be planned to ensure that
they meet patients' needs & are
nutritionally sound.
Planning the menu should, therefore, be
carried out by a group of people who
bring their own expert knowledge to the
process.
(Catering Manager, Dietician, Nurse &
Doctor/Clinician)
The Menu analysis should be done in
three stages:
1. An analysis of the nutritional value of
each menu item.
2. Comparison of these values against the
recommended minimum nutritional
content.
3. An analysis of the entire menu to
ensure that it is nutritionally balanced.
26. Material Management
The daily ration is estimated on the previous day census.
The list is collected every day in the morning & no. of diets of various types are
calculated & accordingly the ration is collected from stores.
50% cooked in morning & 50% cooked in evening.
Dry Ration procured on monthly basis & perishable items on daily basis.
Maintenance of equipments, cold room CMC & AMC
Material
Management
Daily/ Monthly
Demand Estimation
& Indenting
Storage
Issue to Kitchen on
Daily Basis
27. Costing of Catering Services
Costs of the catering service vary significantly with the
majority of hospitals. (Net cost per patient day & food ,
beverages cost per patient day).
Budgets are set for the catering service as a whole taking
the patient service & meals provided to staff & visitors
(non-patient catering) together.
Income generated from non-patient catering is used to
reduce the overall cost of the catering service.
The largest proportion of catering departments (42%) base
their catering service budget on historical information.
Other catering departments are basing their budgets on
target patient cost per patient week (32%), daily food
allowance (18%) & contract price (8%)
Budgeting is based on account of pay rises and increases in
the cost of food & beverages.
Income generation targets are likely to be increased each
year to offset these increased costs & may be set even
higher to reduce the overall catering budget.
Expenditure on catering service includes the costs of food
& beverages (42%), staffing (50%), other indirect
costs such as cleaning materials & a proportion of trust
overheads ( 8%).
28. Food Wastage
The levels of food wastage affects the cost of a catering
service.
Food waste occur at any or all of the following stages:
production, unserved meals at ward level, uneaten food
left on patients’ plates & food wasted in the staff dining
room.
The best controls over food waste are when wastage
levels are regularly monitored, wastage targets are
set & wastage levels & values measured against
these targets.
Remedial Measures to avoid food wastage:
1. Using different sizes of trays when portioning meals
for delivery to wards.
2. Plated meal services
3. Use of menu card System for all meals ensures that
all patients receive a meal of their choice and food
wastage is kept to a minimum.
4. A white board on each ward details all planned
admissions and discharges for the day. Nursing staff
note on the board the actual times of each admission
or discharge & the time at which the kitchen were
informed. This aids communication between the
wards & catering department reduces the amount of
unserved meals at ward level
29. Food Safety & Hygiene is Everybody’s
Business
The provision of safe & nutritious food in hospitals for patients & staff is a major
undertaking based on points listed below:
1. A food safety control system in place with specific guidelines & policies in placed.
2. Food is prepared & served in accordance with recognised food safety procedures &
legislation
3. Combination of Good Management Team.
4. Staff trained in safe hygiene practices & catering skills,
5. Appropriate Quality Controls
6. Monitoring of Food quality temperature failures at the point of serving meals to
patients.
7. Using microwaves at ward level
8. Schedule of cleaning of kitchen area & implementing pest control program.
9. Health checkup of staff & vaccination status at time of recruitment & periodically.
10. Periodical inspection & auditing of the catering department
30. Challenges & Remedial Measures in Managing
Catering Services
Challenges faced by management
1. Sickness absence,
2. Staff turnover rate
3. Staff vacancy rates
Remedial Measures to overcome the
challenges:
1. Incorporate career development opportunities
or
2. Boost employee morale & motivation by
awarding a bonus depending on the
department’s performance & sickness absence
of the individual, against the prior year’s
budget.
3. Hospital management should monitor staff
vacancy & turnover rates on a regular basis
4. Survey to be conducted to analyze pay rates
offered by local competitors, the nature of the
work, the location of the hospital & incentives
offered to staff for retention policy.
31. Performance Indicators
Various Indicators used for Evaluation:
1. No. of Complaints on Food Received
2. No .of Cases of Food Poisoning
3. Instances of False Diet Distribution
4. Non Serving/ Inadequate Serving Complaints
5. Wastages & Pilferage Incidences
6. Pest & Rodents
7. Feedback Proforma
8. Interview at the time of Discharge
32. Conclusion
.....Cost is not always a barrier to higher quality.
To improve the quality of the catering service to patients'
nutritional needs are to be identified & fulfilled, timeliness of
meals, provide dietary assistance.
More effective communication between the catering
department & other staff involved in the catering chain will be
crucial in raising & then maintaining the quality of service
delivered.
Continual improvement, patient satisfaction must be closely
monitored.
Audit Mechanism to be incorporated to keep a check on food
quality & services provided.
33. References
Research Articles
AUDIT COMMISSION (2001) Acute hospital portfolio: Review of national findings, Wetherby: Audit Commission
Publications.
Review Article on Catering for Patients prepared for the Auditor General of Scotland ,November 2003.
Food in Hospitals National Catering and Nutrition Specification for Food and Fluid Provision in Hospitals in
Scotland published by the Scottish Government, June, 2008
Food service in hospital: development of a theoretical model for patient experience and satisfaction using one
hospital in the UK NHS as a case study. H.J. Hartwell, J.S.A. Edwards and C. Symonds.
Managing Food Waste in NHS copyright 2005
Hospital Catering and Patient Nutrition: Report presented by the Auditor General for Wales to the National
Assembly for Wales on 24 March 2011
Organization of food & nutritional support in hospitals: Bapen Advancing Clinical Nutrition.
Patients’ nutritional care in hospital: An ethnographic study of nurses’ role and patients’ experience, Final report
May 2005
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