(WALKERTON —Sept. 27, 2010) --
The Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU)
is challenging the senior management at South Bruce Grey Health Centre to
eat the rethermalized food it wants to foist on patients.
Union president Warren (Smokey) Thomas is
challenging SBGHC CEO Paul Davies and VP Brenda Rantz to eat the reheated
food for a week. If the two can maintain their body weight only eating the
rethermalized food normally served to patients, OPSEU will donate $1,000 to
the hospital foundation. If the two lose weight, OPSEU would ask them to
reconsider spending scarce health care dollars converting to a food service
that patients would find inferior.
“If the retherm meals are as good as Davies
and Rantz say, then they should be eager to get on with this challenge,”
says Thomas.
SBGHC is going through extensive renovations
at its four sites to switch from freshly prepared meals to frozen meals that
will be trucked in, reheated in carts and served to patients. The hospital
has not released the capital costs of these renovations, nor the cost of
buying rethermalization equipment for the new service.
When SBGHC recently dismantled the Durham
cafeteria to make way for the service, they left hospital staff with no
access to fridges or microwaves to store or warm up their own meals. In a
bizarre act, VP Brenda Rantz personally took away all cutlery from the
hospital site, leaving some doctors to eat their lunch using tongue
depressors. Patients are being served cold meals at Durham following the
dismantling of the cafeteria. Staff report food waste is on the rise.
OPSEU has sent a letter to CEO Davies today
outlining the conditions of the challenge. The CEO and VP cannot eat or
drink any foods not normally served to patients. The proportions must also
be equivalent. Rantz and Davies must be weighed before and after a week.
Food must be served as patients receive it – after it has sat in a
rethermalization cart for thirty minutes.
The union argues there is a growing movement
back to fresh hospital food, noting the documented health benefits of
serving fresh foods to recovering patients. Each time the food is frozen and
reheated, it loses nutritional value. Tasteless food also discourages
patients from eating the quantities they need.