Nobody wants to end up in the hospital, let alone have to worry about the kind of food they’ll be served there. Of course, you can’t expect a five-star menu, but you’d hope that the meals are decent enough to help you get through your (hopefully) short visit.
Well, that’s somewhat the case, as you’ll see from these pictures taken from the ‘Rate My Hospital Plate’ Facebook group. This interesting community has over 100k members who’ve shared diverse photos of the food they were served in medical institutions.
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Last Day (4) In Fulwood Hall Hospital
Addenbrookes Sunday Roast
It's My Wife Who Is In Hospital, Furness General, This Was Her Dinner Yesterday
Not all food served at medical institutions is good, even though that might seem incredibly contradictory. Studies have found that hospital malnutrition affects around 30-50% of patients worldwide due to the nutrition decline they may experience during their stay.
It’s important to understand that hospitals often operate on strict budgets and are already scrambling to cope with emergencies. In the midst of all that chaos, it may be tough for them to keep up the highest food and nutritional standards for their patients.
That’s why the ‘Rate My Hospital Plate’ group doesn’t exist to shame medical institutions, it’s more of a fun initiative where patients can find support and connect with one another. People even write kind words in the comments to help improve the morale of posters who are sick.
Meat And Potato Pie, Chips And Green Beans @ Barnsley Hospital
Tea Time At NGH [Northern General Hospital] Sheffield
Hospital Dinner New York City, USA
I'll take the chicken, applesauce, ? Tangerine and roll. They can keep the nasty Mac n cheese and greens. I'm a US southern girl and have always hated them.
Yes, it looks like the plate and utensils are disposable. For your second question, it appears to be a barbecued chicken quarter, macaroni and cheese, some kind of greens (collard greens, maybe), a roll, an orange, milk. I'm not sure what that is in those two cups under the roll, maybe peaches?
Load More Replies...Considering the budget constraints and the already massive strain on medical facilities, experts suggest that hospitals can improve food quality by first providing less processed foods. If they partner with local businesses, they can find healthier take-out options or even fresher meals.
Doctors and nurses can also encourage patients to bring home-cooked meals if their circumstances allow it. Medical institutions should try to provide more fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. Even if they can’t meet all of these criteria, a few small changes can drastically help patient health and recovery during their stay.
St James Hospital, Leeds
A Compilation From When I Was On The Antenatal Ward At Lincoln County
This Was My Wife's Tea Last Night. Fgh [Furness General Hospital]
There are some hospitals that go above and beyond for their patients’ health. In 2018, the UC Davis Medical Center hired a local chef to manage a new initiative called ‘farm-to-fork.’ They prioritized serving locally grown plant-based meals to improve nutrition. The program, which is still in place today, even won a James Beard Foundation award.
This kind of initiative shows that the people in charge of medical institutions have the power to make changes that can benefit their patients and staff. They just need to develop innovative ways of making that a reality.
Day 4 At RDH [Royal Darwin Hospital]
Beef Dinner Qe Gateshead
Royal Berkshire Hospital In Reading
If you’ve been admitted to the hospital, the meals being served will probably be the last thing on your list of worries. What you’ve got to understand is that eating nutritious food can help your body recover faster and gain strength.
In case your hospital meals aren’t up to par, here are a few things you can do to take control of what you’re eating:
- If the hospital has a menu system, check with the staff or dieticians if they can provide you with healthier substitutes of what’s being served.
- Get home-cooked meals delivered, but before doing this, ask permission from the clinician in charge.
- Check for better meal plans that provide more vegetables, nuts, high-carb food, and protein.
Chicken Casserole Rosties And Veg Pgi (Pinderfields General Hospital,wakefield)
Royal Berkshire Hospital In Reading
Spent A Week In Warwick Hospital I'm Gluten Free And Have To Say The Food Was Lovely, Even Had Gluten Free Bread For Breakfast
If you’re a gourmet, hospital food may not be for you. Based on these pictures, I think we’d be able to scarf down most of these meals, while some would have to be reserved for folks with braver stomachs.
Which of the photos on this list did you like the best, and which one shocked you the most? Let us know in the comments, and do share if you have hospital food stories of your own.
Stoke Royal
Some Of My Trays From A Recent Hospital Stay This Month In Ontario
A Sunday Lunch Darlington Hospital
Aint nothing tastes better than tomato water with a side of i don't know what that is but id probably eat it and love it because im a human garbage can and i have no dignity
Dinner At Loma Linda Univ Hospital
Creamy Chicken Casserole…. Vile Qe Birmingham
A Very Old Picture Of A Chicken Dinner I Undoubtedly Didn't Pay For When I Worked In Macclesfield Hospital Kitchen
Can't beat the price. I'm always surprised at how picky some folks can be. This looks filling and good.
Chicken Hotpot, Carrots & Chips. Royal Hallamshire, Sheffield
Currently In Gloucestershire Hospital In Maternity
Very Tasty Mac N Cheese At Barnet Royal Free
Been In Rah Paisley For Over A Week Tbf These Meals Are Actually Lovely Occasionally
Lunch At Loma Linda Univ Hospital
Partner's Meal At Russells Hall Hospital Amu Ward🤢
Beef Cobbler From My Stint In Aberdeen (Ari).....when Did They Get Their Michelin Stars
Breakfast At Loma Linda Univ Hospital
Loma Linda has all-vegetarian food because they are 7th Day Adventist. My best friend was just there for 10 days and was very satisfied with the food choices.
Qe Hospital Gateshead. Finest Jacket Potato Known To Man
Todays Lunch At St Peter’s Hospital 😂🫣
Dinner Time At NGH [Northern General Hospital] Sheffield
Bristol Eye Hospital
Qe Hospital Burger
Nhs Ipswich Hospital I Ordered Apple Rhubarb Crumble
Lovely Food At Grimsby Hospital
This Morning At Whiston
No Words Westmead Hospital Sydney Australia
Lunch At Whiston
Bri Hospital 30th December 2023
Guy I knew had the nurse ask if he wanted pheasant. He got really excited about lunch! Then learned that "bazant" (literally pheasant) is also the Czech term for a hospital portable urinal. Now that's what I call a disappointing hospital meal.
Some of these I don't know if they are supposed to be tasty or nasty, because some look quite boring but on the other hand could be really tasty! 🤷♂️🙃
There's really only a couple that I _think_ are supposed to be really bad. I've certainly had a lot worse than most of these.
Load More Replies...The hospital here has good food. There's a menu you can order from, or you can just get the default meal. I've stayed there three times in three years, and have liked everything I've ordered, even though I'm extremely picky.
Whty do people expect restaurant quality food in hospital? As long as it offers nutrition, then don't moan (unless you're a private patient then you can moan as much as you like).
People have the right to expect food that tastes decent. It won't be restaraunt quality, but no one should be expected to eat anything that's extremely boring, bland, dry and would be far more appropriate in a nursing home than elsewhere. Hell, cardboard has nutrients in the form of fiber; I'd rather choke down a cardboard box than eat unseasoned, mushy trash.
Load More Replies...When I was in hospital (in the UK) earlier this year, the food was decidedly ok. A lot better than it used to be, not great. Though I do have to give a hat tip to the surprisingly good fish and chips I had before I left. But mostly it was bland and obviously pre-prepared. The biggest issues though was the portion size, which was tiny, and the overall lack of vegetables. I couldn't eat the desserts as I am diabetic, so all my calories came from a child size plate of bland, nutrition-free food.
I noticed that most of these meals seem to be from U.K. hospitals. My last few hospital stays have been for day ops. That means I’ve not been on a ward where a meals are served but, in acknowledgement of having fasted since the night before, I’ve been offered a choice of takeaway sandwiches. That doesn’t sound great but when you’ve been fasting for 15 hours or so you don’t want a full meal, they’ve been very nice and since it’s not something I have often it has a great deal of novelty value. I love the NHS!
Load More Replies...They all look pretty bad. However, toast and tea in all Uk hospitals is absolutely lovely, so there is some good there.
NHS food has always been pretty good; I was a social worker with elderly people and my clients generally loved the food. The most interesting hospital Mel I ever had was when I was on a prenatal ward in the 80s. The system was that patients ordered meals one day to be eaten the next. The day you were admitted you usually got the meal ordered by someone who’d been discharged; the alternative was a sandwich but on the whole it worked well. The person whose meal i got was seriously keen on potatoes; jacket with cheese, mash and chips!
Load More Replies...I was in the hospital and the food was not bad at all. However I had to go to a nursing facility when I got out of the hospital because I live alone and the food was a real mixed bag. Some of it was very tasty, some of it was garbage but it tended to be VERY small portions. Also this one insane nurse screamed at me for not eating or drinking certain things (coffee, strawberry ice cream, jello, etc.)
Because jello is the caviar of gelatin and full of crucial nutrients. 🙄 Sarcasm aside, WTF and how does screaming at someone for not eating/drinking certain foods help their recovery?!
Load More Replies...Really BP? I have to pay to be able to scroll to the end of the thread? How ridiculous. I hope no one pays for this shet.
I just recently spent a weekend in hospital and really liked the food. I'm gluten free and they had me on foods that would be low risk for reflux. They managed to still bring me delicious foods.
Really heavy on the carbs. I'm guessing that's for nutritional reasons to support recuperation.
As the worlds worst/laziest cook I would be more than happy with most of these meals. Any meal I haven't had to prepare for myself is a good meal!! Though the egg mayonnaise and the 'burger' maybe not..
A lot of these are British. I suppose in the UK you get long waiting lists and awful food but in the US you just sort of die if you can't afford healthcare.
Most of it looked ok. I'm assuming that the meals will depend on the dietary needs (cardiology would have a low-fat/low-salt diet, for example).
I'm sorry to go into the general opinion but I think hospital food should be diverse and packed with nutrition. That does not mean it should lack taste though. But all these potatoes and peas and gravy is disturbing. Also Fried food & processed food does not belong in a place where you want people to get healthy. Why isn't everything whole grain. Where is the diversity in veggies, the (wholegrain) rice, the tofu/tempe, curries, stir fries etc?
If hospitals served garbage like whole-grain junk, "diverse" vegetables and curries, most people would throw it away. Fried food, processed food, potatoes, meat, peas, carrots, green beans, sweets, chili, sandwiches, things like that taste good and people will eat them. People should not be forced to eat things they do not like, just because they're in a hospital. Fried food, hotdogs, lunch meat, they ALL belong in a hospital, they taste good. If I'd been given what you mentioned when I went in for a broken leg, I would have thrown everything away and starved during my stay. I'm damn glad that I had coffee (WITH cream and sugar,) pop, food that was tolerable and cookies that weren't half-bad.
Load More Replies...I spent 2 months in hospital from April and the food was that bad I basically lived on custard, rice pudding and porridge. I'm not kidding when I say they were the only food items they couldn't screw up. The lasagne was made using tinned corned beef ffs!
Wut?! Tinned corned beef in lasagna? That is just offensive!
Load More Replies...One mealtime when I was last in hospital I requested a baked potato with butter and cheese, jam roly poly and custard for dessert and a tea. ALL that came was a single packet of cheese
Guy I knew had the nurse ask if he wanted pheasant. He got really excited about lunch! Then learned that "bazant" (literally pheasant) is also the Czech term for a hospital portable urinal. Now that's what I call a disappointing hospital meal.
Some of these I don't know if they are supposed to be tasty or nasty, because some look quite boring but on the other hand could be really tasty! 🤷♂️🙃
There's really only a couple that I _think_ are supposed to be really bad. I've certainly had a lot worse than most of these.
Load More Replies...The hospital here has good food. There's a menu you can order from, or you can just get the default meal. I've stayed there three times in three years, and have liked everything I've ordered, even though I'm extremely picky.
Whty do people expect restaurant quality food in hospital? As long as it offers nutrition, then don't moan (unless you're a private patient then you can moan as much as you like).
People have the right to expect food that tastes decent. It won't be restaraunt quality, but no one should be expected to eat anything that's extremely boring, bland, dry and would be far more appropriate in a nursing home than elsewhere. Hell, cardboard has nutrients in the form of fiber; I'd rather choke down a cardboard box than eat unseasoned, mushy trash.
Load More Replies...When I was in hospital (in the UK) earlier this year, the food was decidedly ok. A lot better than it used to be, not great. Though I do have to give a hat tip to the surprisingly good fish and chips I had before I left. But mostly it was bland and obviously pre-prepared. The biggest issues though was the portion size, which was tiny, and the overall lack of vegetables. I couldn't eat the desserts as I am diabetic, so all my calories came from a child size plate of bland, nutrition-free food.
I noticed that most of these meals seem to be from U.K. hospitals. My last few hospital stays have been for day ops. That means I’ve not been on a ward where a meals are served but, in acknowledgement of having fasted since the night before, I’ve been offered a choice of takeaway sandwiches. That doesn’t sound great but when you’ve been fasting for 15 hours or so you don’t want a full meal, they’ve been very nice and since it’s not something I have often it has a great deal of novelty value. I love the NHS!
Load More Replies...They all look pretty bad. However, toast and tea in all Uk hospitals is absolutely lovely, so there is some good there.
NHS food has always been pretty good; I was a social worker with elderly people and my clients generally loved the food. The most interesting hospital Mel I ever had was when I was on a prenatal ward in the 80s. The system was that patients ordered meals one day to be eaten the next. The day you were admitted you usually got the meal ordered by someone who’d been discharged; the alternative was a sandwich but on the whole it worked well. The person whose meal i got was seriously keen on potatoes; jacket with cheese, mash and chips!
Load More Replies...I was in the hospital and the food was not bad at all. However I had to go to a nursing facility when I got out of the hospital because I live alone and the food was a real mixed bag. Some of it was very tasty, some of it was garbage but it tended to be VERY small portions. Also this one insane nurse screamed at me for not eating or drinking certain things (coffee, strawberry ice cream, jello, etc.)
Because jello is the caviar of gelatin and full of crucial nutrients. 🙄 Sarcasm aside, WTF and how does screaming at someone for not eating/drinking certain foods help their recovery?!
Load More Replies...Really BP? I have to pay to be able to scroll to the end of the thread? How ridiculous. I hope no one pays for this shet.
I just recently spent a weekend in hospital and really liked the food. I'm gluten free and they had me on foods that would be low risk for reflux. They managed to still bring me delicious foods.
Really heavy on the carbs. I'm guessing that's for nutritional reasons to support recuperation.
As the worlds worst/laziest cook I would be more than happy with most of these meals. Any meal I haven't had to prepare for myself is a good meal!! Though the egg mayonnaise and the 'burger' maybe not..
A lot of these are British. I suppose in the UK you get long waiting lists and awful food but in the US you just sort of die if you can't afford healthcare.
Most of it looked ok. I'm assuming that the meals will depend on the dietary needs (cardiology would have a low-fat/low-salt diet, for example).
I'm sorry to go into the general opinion but I think hospital food should be diverse and packed with nutrition. That does not mean it should lack taste though. But all these potatoes and peas and gravy is disturbing. Also Fried food & processed food does not belong in a place where you want people to get healthy. Why isn't everything whole grain. Where is the diversity in veggies, the (wholegrain) rice, the tofu/tempe, curries, stir fries etc?
If hospitals served garbage like whole-grain junk, "diverse" vegetables and curries, most people would throw it away. Fried food, processed food, potatoes, meat, peas, carrots, green beans, sweets, chili, sandwiches, things like that taste good and people will eat them. People should not be forced to eat things they do not like, just because they're in a hospital. Fried food, hotdogs, lunch meat, they ALL belong in a hospital, they taste good. If I'd been given what you mentioned when I went in for a broken leg, I would have thrown everything away and starved during my stay. I'm damn glad that I had coffee (WITH cream and sugar,) pop, food that was tolerable and cookies that weren't half-bad.
Load More Replies...I spent 2 months in hospital from April and the food was that bad I basically lived on custard, rice pudding and porridge. I'm not kidding when I say they were the only food items they couldn't screw up. The lasagne was made using tinned corned beef ffs!
Wut?! Tinned corned beef in lasagna? That is just offensive!
Load More Replies...One mealtime when I was last in hospital I requested a baked potato with butter and cheese, jam roly poly and custard for dessert and a tea. ALL that came was a single packet of cheese
