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NHS nurses and managers hear how it feels to go hungry in hospital PDF Print E-mail

Older people have told nurses and NHS chief executives how it feels to be ignored and go hungry in hospital at a specially organised event on Friday 11 May.  

60 people shared their views including Maria Nash, from Barnet, a disabled 60 year-old women who last year was told a hospital couldn’t provide food to meet her specialist dietary requirements because of budget cuts.  Subsequently she had to become an outpatient and get to and from hospital every day. 

She said: “The hospital told me my dietary requirements would be catered for but when lunchtime came I was left hungry and helpless. NHS boards need to meaningfully involve patients in developing strategies for providing food to every patient.”  

Mala Karasu, Matron Elderly Care, St Guys and St Thomas’s NHS Foundation Trust, said about the conference: “This experience has been so useful. This falls inline with what the trust is working on which is a good nutrition strategy for older people.”  

The event, held at Cavendish Square London, is part of our campaign ‘Hungry to be Heard’ which aims to end the scandal that six out of ten older patients being malnourished in hospital. Ignoring this problem is a costly mistake – NICE calculate that the NHS would save £13.3 million if it implemented guidelines to tackle malnutrition. The total cost of malnutrition in the UK has been reported to be £7.3 billion a year.   

A key recommendation of Age Concern’s campaign is that hospital staff listen to older people. The results of this conference will be used to produce a national report on how older people and their relatives think the NHS should tackle malnutrition in hospital. 

Age Concern 14th May 2007