health care

Nourishing Health Care Innovation: Vancouver Coastal Health’s Planetary Menus Pilot - A first in Canada

Nourish’s Anchor Cohort program is grounded in the critical role of collaboration in driving systemic change in health care. Below we tell the story of the transformative journey of Vancouver General Hospital’s development of the hospital-wide Planetary Health Menus project, a first in Canada.

At Nourish, we work with incredible innovators who drive positive change through their vision, initiative, and action. Nourish catalyzes the shift towards better food in health care by fostering collaboration and shared learning among innovators.

This work takes time because of the scope and scale of the change contemplated. But, when change is finally realized, it can feel like magic.

We felt the magic earlier this spring when Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH) launched its Planetary Health Menus pilot at the Vancouver General Hospital, the largest in B.C. The project was initiated by visionary champions who were supported by partners including Nourish through their participation in our second Cohort. Over two years in the Cohort, the VCH team bridged departmental silos, built support across the organization, and has now scaled their work from a prototype to a national success story.

The Critical Role of Relationships in Systems Change Work  

Relationships are the seeds from which change flourishes. This is one of the core tenets of Nourish’s Cohorts. For the past seven years, Nourish has been bringing together health care leaders to leverage their key roles within their organizations and communities to accelerate progress toward health for people and the planet. Our three cohorts to date have engaged over 30 health care organizations from coast to coast to coast, and one of the results from these longitudinal partnerships we are seeing today is the achievements of the VCH team. From the seeds nurtured by the cohort has come a watershed moment to elevate the national conversation around the pivotal role of plant-forward menus in health care climate action. 

Nourish’s Role: Bridging Silos to Cultivate Interdisciplinary Collaboration 

The VCH Planetary Health Menus Pilot was spearheaded by an interdisciplinary group of motivated changemakers who believe food is a lever for taking bold and ambitious climate action. The vision was brought to fruition by a cross-department partnership led by Dr. Annie LaLande, PhD Candidate and Surgical Resident at Vancouver General Hospital, and Tiffany Chiang, Director of Food Service Transformation and Strategic Projects at VCH. Together, they would bring the expertise of food service staff clinicians, dieticians, and planetary health experts with the work of Chef Ned Bell, a renowned sustainable food system expert.

In 2021, the team joined the second Nourish Anchor Cohort after it had completed its initial testing of planetary menus on a surgical ward. The Cohort program provided a collaborative space for the team to surface challenges, access resources, seek advice, and harness the benefits of collaborative learning within a community of cohort peers and alumni about what they could achieve together. It was within this nurturing ecosystem that the potential of food as a lever for change flourished. 

We’ve long used the phrase ‘food is medicine’ and we’re finding that this is true not only for patients but for our planet as well. Providing tasty, nutritious meals, which is critical to recovery from illness and injury, also presents a significant opportunity to decrease our environmental footprint by focusing on lower-impact ingredients.
— Dr. Annie Lalande

The VCH team built a truly cross-departmental team, building interest, participation, and commitment from the disciplines and departments required to realize their vision. With the right people on board, they learned they could go further faster, momentum grew, and the idea expanded from piloting on a ward to becoming a hospital-wide project. 

Nourish’s Food for Health Levers provides a framework on how food in health care can advance climate action, reduce health inequities, and promote community well-being and patient healing. In 2023, the VCH team in the Anchor Cohort conducted a successful six-month pilot to test and introduce flavourful and comforting meals for patients, made with fresh and nutritious ingredients to aid healing and recovery. The result demonstrated that hospital food can and should be delicious, nutritious, and an incredible opportunity to take climate action three times a day.

Together the VCH team dared to challenge the status quo, envisioning a future where hospital meals weren’t just sustenance, but a necessary ingredient in supporting planetary health. The Vancouver General Hospital pilot represents the first successful Canadian hospital-wide pilot of a plant-rich menu. Elaine Eppler, a VCH dietitian, described the pilot project as the most exciting endeavor in her 36-year career.

What’s Next: Sustaining Momentum and Scaling Impact

An in-depth analysis is underway to quantify the greenhouse gas emissions reductions during the project and to identify the menu changes with the greatest impact. Early predictions expect emissions to reduce by 15-20%. Patient satisfaction metrics are expected to soar, drastically reducing food waste and the associated costs. Beyond the project, the ripple effect is already expanding to reach other hospitals within the health authority and Nourish aims to build momentum with other hospitals making net zero commitments. 

Canadian Hospitals are Invited to Join the Movement for Planetary Health

Nourish invites Canadian health care organizations to seize the opportunity to leverage the power of food and join a growing global movement. For example, New York Public Hospitals, shifts to plant-based meals have already reduced emissions by 36% and Denmark’s action plan to transition to plant-based food offers grants and incentives to shift menus and develop value chains. There is a growing urgency for policy shifts to support this work, and hospitals are uniquely positioned to take a leadership role. Join a growing number of health care organizations committed to climate action through the Coolfood Pledge.

Nourish change in health care.  

Watch Nourish ambassador, Chef Ned Bell’s CTV interview on the project here.

Photo Credit: VCH

Taking Inspiration from Denmark’s Example in Healthy, Sustainable Food Systems

Since 2004, a collaboration of countries known as the Nordic Cooperation, have been transforming their food system to be healthier for their populations and the environment, bringing to life the vision of the New Nordic Food Manifesto

In January 2024, Nourish’s Jen Reynolds and Amy Ford were honoured to be invited to Copenhagen by the World Resources Institute for their Coolfood Summit to learn about how these and other initiatives from around the globe are making an impact on reducing emissions that cause climate change.

We were so inspired to see the transformation 20 years on from the manifesto to now in Denmark and to learn about the journey. Food in public institutions is primarily organic (minimum 60% of ingredients), it celebrates seasonality and place, and it’s a platform for building strong healthy communities - serving, educating and engaging children, elders, hospital patients more in their food and where it comes from. Furthering momentum the Danish Action Plan for Plant-Based Foods released in 2023 charts a path to greater sustainability and health.

In attendance at the Coolfood Summit were leading experts in gastronomy, environmental research, food systems, and more. There is a growing movement of delicious climate action across the world:

  • Ikea shared highlights of their many years of work to develop a plant-based alternative to their most iconic food product, meatballs, served around the world, and celebrate its resounding success. This spurred lively discussions about the benefits of meat-imitation vs. featuring plant foods in more natural states. Ikea is seen as a world leader in mainstream climate-friendly menus and was an early Coolfood Pledge signatory.

  • The World Resources Institute shared a sneak peek of their updated 2.0 Playbook for Guiding Diners to Plant-Based Dishes in Food Service featuring a host of “no regret” menu updates to inspire food service guests to eagerly choose the most climate-friendly options. The playbook is based on extensive behavioural science showing simple ways to encourage dishes that have a lower climate impact, like serving salads on colourful plates instead of white ones. (see 2020 playbook)

  • The MAD Academy shared about its vision for a better tomorrow, stemming from its founding by restaurant noma’s owner Rene Redzepi, as a place to inspire food-based sustainable change. They are training the next generation of chefs, baristas, and bartenders to use elevated gastronomy and impeccable ingredient sourcing to pave the way to reduced emissions in the most delicious way.

The message was clear and Nourish is excited to keep building momentum in Canada: health care providers are uniquely positioned to demonstrate anchor leadership in their communities and industry, by leveraging the power of food for positive change. Simple shifts like serving less-carbon-intensive ingredients, and strategically prioritizing sustainability in procurement practices, translate into putting both patients and the planet at the centre of hospital food service.  This can lead to a thriving system that honours the land we live on, and the health of our communities. 

Watch the webinar on April 4, 2024, to be inspired by the Danish food system innovation!

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.