Literature DB >> 34609060

Impact of room service on nutritional intake, plate and production waste, meal quality and patient satisfaction and meal costs: A single site pre-post evaluation.

Bianca Neaves1, Jack J Bell1,2,3, Sally McCray4,5.   

Abstract

AIM: Room service is a patient-focused foodservice model gaining interest in Australian hospitals following demonstrated patient and organisational benefits. This study aimed to compare nutritional intake, waste, patient satisfaction, meal costs and meal quality between a bought-in, thaw-retherm foodservice model and a cook-fresh, on-demand room service model at a large tertiary public hospital.
METHODS: A retrospective analysis of quality assurance data compared thaw-retherm to room service. Nutritional intake and plate waste were measured using a visual intake analysis tool; production waste was measured using weighted analysis methodology; patient satisfaction was measured using a validated patient satisfaction survey; meal quality was assessed using a validated meal quality audit tool, and meal costs were obtained from hospital finance reports. Independent sample t-tests or nonparametric equivalent (Mann-Whitney U-test) for continuous variables and Pearson's Chi-square for categorical data were applied for comparative purposes.
RESULTS: Average energy and protein intake, as well as percentage requirements met, improved between thaw-retherm and room service (4320 kJ/day vs 7265 kJ/day; 42.4 g/day vs 82.5 g/day; and 46% vs 80.7%; 49.9% vs 98.4%; all P < .001. Reductions in plate waste (40% vs 15%) and production waste (15% vs 5.6%, P < .001) were observed and food costs decreased by 9% with room service. Meal quality audit results improved, and patient satisfaction increased with % respondents satisfied increasing from 75.0% to 89.8% (χ2 9.985[2]; P = .007) for room service.
CONCLUSIONS: This research demonstrates significant improvements in patient and organisational outcomes with room service compared to a thaw-retherm model in a large public hospital.
© 2021 Dietitians Australia.

Entities:  

Keywords:  costs; foodservice; nutritional intake; room service; satisfaction; waste

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34609060     DOI: 10.1111/1747-0080.12705

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nutr Diet        ISSN: 1446-6368            Impact factor:   2.333


  1 in total

1.  Nutritional intake and foodservice satisfaction of adults receiving specialist inpatient mental health services.

Authors:  Judi Porter; Jorja Collins
Journal:  Nutr Diet       Date:  2022-06-08       Impact factor: 2.859

  1 in total

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