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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
This study presents a comprehensive characterization of plate waste (food served but not eaten) at an
acute care hospital in Portugal and elaborates on possible waste reduction measures. Even though waste
prevention is a priority in Europe, large amounts of food are still being wasted every day, with hospitals
giving rise to two to three times more food waste than other foodservice sectors.
For this work the plate waste arising at the ward level was audited during 8 weeks, covering almost
8000 meals, using a general hospital as case study. Weighing the food served to patients and that
returned after the meal allowed calculating plate waste for the average meal, as well as for individual
meal items. Comparison of food waste arising showed that differences exist among wards, with some
generating more waste than others. On average each patient throws away 953 g of food each day, representing 35% of the food served. This equates to 8.7 thousand tonnes of food waste being thrown away
each year at hospitals across Portugal. These tonnes of food transformed into waste represent economic
losses and environmental impacts, being estimated that 16.4 thousand tonnes of CO2 (equivalent) and
35.3 million euros are the annual national indicators in Portugal. This means that 0.5% of the
Portuguese National Health budget gets throw.n away as food waste. Given the magnitude of the food
problem five measures were suggested to reduce food waste, and their potential impact and ease of
implementation were discussed. Even though food waste is unavoidable the results obtained in this work
highlight the potential financial and environmental savings for Portuguese hospitals, providing a basis to
establish future strategies to tackle food waste
Description
Keywords
Waste reduction Meal delivery Plated system Bulk delivery Food loss Carbon footprint
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier