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Opinion: Harnessing the healing power of food in Canadian health care

Planetary Health Menu Pilot featuring Korean Gochujang Bowl by Chef Ned Bell - Credit Leila Kwok

Opinion: An estimated half of food served to patients goes uneaten. The Planetary Health Menu project at Vancouver General Hospital is testing the power of food with diverse and delicious menu items

Author of the article:

Dr. Annie Lalande, Ned Bell, Lana Brandt

Published Apr 10, 2024  •  Last updated 53 minutes ago  •  3 minute read

Canada is warming at more than twice the global rate and there is no shortage of headlines ringing the climate alarm louder than ever. The escalating environmental impacts from the climate emergency underscore the intricate interplay between human health and the well-being of our planet. As extreme temperatures become more common and air quality continues to be threatened by a fifth new season dedicated to forest fires, the toll on respiratory and cardiovascular health will continue to increase. And the risk of diseases transmitted to people from insects and animals and extreme weather events will impact human health and the infrastructure of health care. This burden unfortunately falls hardest on the most vulnerable members of our society, including our children, elders, those grappling with chronic health conditions, and individuals navigating the inequities of low socioeconomic status.

Responding to climate change mitigation and adaptation with bold courage is imperative for safeguarding planetary health and the future of generations to come. The health care sector has a tremendous opportunity to align with its core tenet of “do no harm” by taking bold climate leadership and addressing its current footprint.

A growing number of health care providers are realizing the under-utilized solution of food as medicine. Food powerfully intersects human and planetary health, making clear that nature and humans can only thrive together. The EAT-Lancet report identifies that our current food system operates beyond our planetary boundaries, and food is the single most powerful lever for returning to balance. Shifting away from intensively farmed meat and dairy to create menus where plant-based proteins and local, fresh ingredients take the spotlight will not only cut emissions but also improve patient healing.

Food in Canadian health care is a $4-billion annual opportunity to take significant climate action three times a day in health care food services and reduce food waste — an estimated half of food served to patients goes uneaten.

An innovative network of health care providers is leading in food-related solutions in Canada. As an organization dedicated to the transition toward more preventative, equitable, and sustainable health care systems, Nourish works with leaders through organizations like Vancouver Coastal Health, which has tested and proven the power of food with its Planetary Health Menu project at Vancouver General Hospital. Data is being gathered on patient experience and food waste and, over the coming months, the menu items that patients enjoyed the most will be incorporated into menus across VCH.

The project brought together food service leaders, dietitians, clinicians and sustainability experts to work alongside Ned Bell, renowned chef and sustainable food ambassador. Together, they created over two dozen diverse and delicious menu items that feature lower-impact and primarily plant-powered ingredients. The project also engaged local farmers and artisans to source fresh, local, and seasonal food where possible.

Health care providers have a timely opportunity to demonstrate leadership in planetary health. By transitioning to planetary health menus, institutions can leverage their significant buying power to improve healing, health equity, and climate action.

It is an opportunity to shift the way we think about hospital food to recognize the central role it plays in recovery from illness and injury, and to better nourish people. It is also a chance for health care organizations to not only model healthy and more sustainable eating patterns, but to provide inspiration for patients to maintain such practices at home, amplifying the lasting impact of such a change.

Canada was one of 124 countries that committed to the Climate and Health Declaration at the COP28 World Climate Action Summit. From tracking and reducing emissions data through the Coolfood Pledge to weaving Indigenous food ways into health care menus, concerted policy efforts can help address climate and health care challenges.

Health care has a timely opportunity — not to mention a moral imperative — to lead through daily action to address the climate emergency. By applying the power of food and shifting to sustainable and inclusive health care food service, together we can advance climate action, health equity, and community wellbeing. You can learn more about Planetary Health Menus at NourishLeadership.ca.

Dr. Annie Lalande is a surgical resident at Vancouver General Hospital; Ned Bell is a chef and sustainable food ambassador; Lana Brandt is strategic communications and engagement manager at Nourish.

Nourish Symposium Gathers Health Care to Support Planetary Health Through Food

Food for Health Symposium Provides Pathways to Take Bold Climate Action

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Saskatoon (September 20, 2023) - Today, the national Nourish Food for Health Symposium kicks off in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan with an opening keynote speech from Climate Activist and Emergency Physician, Dr. Courtney Howard. A central theme at this year’s Symposium is acknowledging that food and health care systems are enormous contributors to the climate crisis, but that they are also a timely $4-billion opportunity in Canada that cannot be ignored with the climate alarm bells ringing louder than ever.

“The intersection of environment and health is a powerful sweet spot where our efforts can yield outsized positive impacts on our lives now and into the future,” said Dr. Courtney Howard, ER Physician and globally recognized expert on climate change and health. “Using health system procurement to increase local, plant-rich food for patients and provide a stable market to support Canadian farmers can enhance national food security in a way that decreases our vulnerability to climate change-amplified crop challenges while reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that are driving climate disruption. It’s a tasty win-win for people and planet,” Howard continued.

“Nourish is supporting the health sector to leverage their purchasing power and make a public commitment to take bold climate action," said Jennifer Reynolds, Co-Executive Director of Nourish. “Updating menus, reducing food waste, and shifting to plant-forward ingredients that heal is an untapped opportunity for our health care systems to help mitigate climate change. We are recruiting hospitals around the country to commit to the Coolfood Pledge to achieve science-based targets to reduce the climate impact of the food they serve by 25%. Our ambitious goal is to be working with 100 hospitals by 2025 in order to have a significant impact on helping Canada to meet its climate targets.”

Nourish offers free resources including the Sustainable Menu Guide and Values-Based Procurement Primer to support health care facilities to take climate action by embedding planetary health principles to ensure environmental sustainability and climate resiliency in their daily practices. With early adopters already taking action in Canada, Nourish is witnessing the true power that transforming food in health care can have, and how changing one small thing can lead to scalable and lasting change.

The Food for Health Symposium also includes land-based experiences with event co-hosts CHEP Good Food and Saskatchewan Health Authority as well as workshops around the interconnectedness of climate action, Indigenous foodways, and food prescribing. 

Nourish invites health care leaders to get in touch and make the commitment to planetary health today. Learn more here

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Nourish empowers health care to embrace food as medicine to advance health equity, climate action, and community well-being. We work to harness the untapped and neglected power of food in health care to transition to food and health systems that build health for patients and the planet

Saskatchewan Health Authority is the largest organization in Saskatchewan, employing more than 40,000 employees and physicians. Together, we are responsible for the delivery of safe, high quality health care for the entire province.

CHEP Good Food For over 30 years, CHEP Good Food has operated within a capacity building

model, working with children, families, and communities to improve access to good food and promote food security so that we can achieve our vision of a food secure community..

Media Contact: Lana Brandt, Communications Manager

Phone: 778.833.2954 Email: lbrandt@nourishleadership.ca


Click here for the 2023 Symposium Electronic Press Kit.

2023 Food for Health Symposium Identifies Pathways Towards Planetary Health

Nourish Hosts Symposium to Address Health Equity and Climate Action in Health Care

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Saskatoon (September 19, 2023) - On September 20 - 21, 2023, Nourish joins the Saskatchewan Health Authority (SHA) and CHEP Good Food in co-hosting the second national Food for Health Symposium in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The two-day event brings together thought leaders from around the continent to participate in immersive off-site land-based experiences, learning about the land and communities in Saskatchewan and experiential workshops that explore the power of food in health care to rebuild planetary health.

“Food and health care systems are enormous contributors to the climate crisis, but they also provide a $4-billion opportunity in Canada to tackle health inequities and climate change,” said Jen Reynolds, Co-Executive Director of Nourish. “At Nourish, we work with the health care community to improve the sustainability of menus, reduce food waste and spending, while serving culturally mindful foods to support better healing and build more resilient food systems outside of hospital walls. The Food for Health Symposium provides a space to connect leaders working at the nexus of these issues who can then return home with renewed inspiration and stronger networks to make real change happen in their communities,” continued Reynolds.

“The Saskatchewan Health Authority is honoured to co-host this year’s Symposium in Saskatchewan to build off of our involvement over the past few years with Nourish’s Anchor Cohort. SHA has witnessed firsthand how food choices can create significant improvements in health care. Together, we have engaged with local communities to bring Indigenous foodways to our menus, delivered a fruit and vegetable prescription program, built programs to support local growers, and implemented composting programs.” said Andrew Will, CEO of Saskatchewan Health Authority.

“CHEP Good Foods is thrilled to partner with Nourish as an extension of our work to help communities achieve greater food security and improved health,” said Gord Androsoff, Executive Director of CHEP Good Food. “It is inspiring to see how simple changes to health care menus can lead to lasting change when it comes to taking climate action and improving health equity in Canada.”

The second national Food for Health Symposium features inspirational speakers including:

  • Dr. Courtney Howard, Emergency Physician and Climate Activist

  • Dr. Priscilla Settee, Indigenous Professor

  • Dr. Elisa Levi, Food Sovereignty Expert

  • Dr. Steven Chen, Chief Medical Officer who is renowned for his award-winning Recipe4Health “food is medicine” model in California

  • André Picard, Health Reporter and Columnist for the Globe and Mail

The Symposium also includes land-based experiences with local hosts as well as workshops around transformative themes including climate action, Indigenous foodways, anchor leadership, and food prescribing. Nourish invites everyone interested in food for health to join our work to advance health equity, climate action, and patient healing.

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Nourish empowers health care to embrace food as medicine to advance health equity, climate action, and community well-being. We work to harness the untapped and neglected power of food in health care to transition to food and health systems that build health for patients and the planet. Saskatchewan Health Authority is the largest organization in Saskatchewan, employing more than 40,000 employees and physicians. Together, we are responsible for the delivery of safe, high-quality health care for the entire province.

CHEP Good Food For over 30 years, CHEP Good Food has operated within a capacity building model, working with children, families, and communities to improve access to good food and promote food security so that we can achieve our vision of a food secure community.

Media Contact: Lana Brandt, Communications Manager

Phone: 778.833.2954 Email: lbrandt@nourishleadership.ca

Click here for the 2023 Symposium Electronic Press Kit.