Guest guest Posted October 29, 2007 Report Share Posted October 29, 2007 Fortunately for me, except for kidney stone emergency room visits, I have not been in a hospital for many years for a time sufficient to actually eat a meal there. I think the hospital should offer healthy alternatives. However I also agree with you, if the alternatives are available in the cafeteria it is the parents' job to get the child to eat whatever is correct. Let me state that I don't have kids but this is the tact my parents took also. It was up to them. I do have one comment on giving kids McDonalds in a hospital. If the parents have all along been feeding their kids McDonalds (which probably is not the best choice but . . . .) and the kid is sick or recovering and the McDonalds meal is not going to physically set back their recovery and the kid loves McDonalds and is comfortable with McDonalds, might it be okay to feed the kids McDonalds to make them feel better once or twice? I'm not advocating feeding kids McDonalds but I've never liked being in a hospital and maybe a little comfort food isn't such a bad thing. I don't know. (Of course, my brain has a bit of difficulty with that since, there's also the line of thought of, gee if opiates make you feel a little bit better might it not be such a bad thing . . .)(Of course when I'm in the hospital for kidney stones I urge them most vocally to please, please give me opiates.) Finally a note on hospitals in general. I'm most concerned with this problem with staph that is resistant to anti biotics and that it seems to be very common for people to pick it up in hospitals or even schools, basically places where there are a lot of people, particularly a lot of sick people (startling, huh?). And now I even see animals going to vets are starting to pick up this staph strain. Well, I suppose if all the honey bees disappear and our food stocks get drastically reduced and all the oil and gas is used up and we haven't had the foresight to develop/start using alternative fuel sources, who cares . . . ;<) Gary --- BARBARA KIPPER <Kipper38 wrote: > Hi friends, > I haven't had any bad experiences with hospital > cafeterias, because they usually have a lot of > choices. The meals in my room were not swell, but > then again I was recovering [and drugged] from a hip > replacement. :>( > As far as McDonald's or other places that cater to > children: > The parents MUST be there for the kids. No > commercial establishment of any type is responsible > for making family choices. I believe most " fast > food " places are making an effort to do better. It > is due to pressure from family/parents who want > healthy choices for their kids. > As a parent and grandparent and great grandma [!] I > think it is sad that we think " others " must make > things right, so there is no need for us to teach > the kids better nutrition. > Responsibility really lies with the family. > I guess I am from the old school [i was lucky]. > My dad said: " If so and so wants to put her head in > a bucket of crud, does that mean you need to? " > So, kids should learn alternative thinking and > solutions. > Lesson learned from the olden days! > Thanks for listening. > Barb > Mesa, AZ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 29, 2007 Report Share Posted October 29, 2007 I haven't been in the hospital in a long time myself - not since before I became a vegetarian. Needless to say, since they couldn't manage to get a low-sodium, low-cholesterol, low-sugar diet right, I have absolutely zero faith in them getting a vegetarian diet right! However, I'm ornery enough that if they send me the wrong thing, I'll send it right back - I will NOT eat anything with meat in it! (Also, it makes me nauseous now if I accidentally get some soup with a meat based broth.) The last time I was even visiting in a hospital was when my granddaughter was born. My daughter wanted me there a lot during the 2 days she was there and it only took one trip to the cafeteria to discover I was better off stopping at McDonalds and getting a salad and their yogurt and fruit parfait to take with me. As far as a sick kid goes, sometimes you have to let them eat what they WILL eat, even if it isn't necessarily the most healthy thing for them. Luckily my granddaughter loves ALL veggies and would rather not eat meat, much to the dismay of her parents, but she does like the occasional chicken strip with Ranch dressing. I think you have to make some exceptions when it comes to a kid, especially a kid who is sick and in the hospital. If they won't touch the food served on the tray but would be happy with a Happy Meal and a milkshake, well, I say get the Happy Meal and a milkshake. In some ways it's not that much worse than most of our favorite comfort foods - the ooey gooey baked macaroni and cheese that's full of all kinds of fats, or mashed potatoes and gravy ... but sometimes that's what you need because it's the only thing that tastes or sounds good to you. On Behalf Of Gary Mattingly Monday, October 29, 2007 1:10 PM Re: Re:hospital food (I'm getting a bit OT here) Fortunately for me, except for kidney stone emergency room visits, I have not been in a hospital for many years for a time sufficient to actually eat a meal there. I think the hospital should offer healthy alternatives. However I also agree with you, if the alternatives are available in the cafeteria it is the parents' job to get the child to eat whatever is correct. Let me state that I don't have kids but this is the tact my parents took also. It was up to them. I do have one comment on giving kids McDonalds in a hospital. If the parents have all along been feeding their kids McDonalds (which probably is not the best choice but . . . .) and the kid is sick or recovering and the McDonalds meal is not going to physically set back their recovery and the kid loves McDonalds and is comfortable with McDonalds, might it be okay to feed the kids McDonalds to make them feel better once or twice? I'm not advocating feeding kids McDonalds but I've never liked being in a hospital and maybe a little comfort food isn't such a bad thing. I don't know. (Of course, my brain has a bit of difficulty with that since, there's also the line of thought of, gee if opiates make you feel a little bit better might it not be such a bad thing . . .)(Of course when I'm in the hospital for kidney stones I urge them most vocally to please, please give me opiates.) Finally a note on hospitals in general. I'm most concerned with this problem with staph that is resistant to anti biotics and that it seems to be very common for people to pick it up in hospitals or even schools, basically places where there are a lot of people, particularly a lot of sick people (startling, huh?). And now I even see animals going to vets are starting to pick up this staph strain. Well, I suppose if all the honey bees disappear and our food stocks get drastically reduced and all the oil and gas is used up and we haven't had the foresight to develop/start using alternative fuel sources, who cares . . . ;<) Gary --- BARBARA KIPPER <Kipper38 wrote: > Hi friends, > I haven't had any bad experiences with hospital > cafeterias, because they usually have a lot of > choices. The meals in my room were not swell, but > then again I was recovering [and drugged] from a hip > replacement. :>( > As far as McDonald's or other places that cater to > children: > The parents MUST be there for the kids. No > commercial establishment of any type is responsible > for making family choices. I believe most " fast > food " places are making an effort to do better. It > is due to pressure from family/parents who want > healthy choices for their kids. > As a parent and grandparent and great grandma [!] I > think it is sad that we think " others " must make > things right, so there is no need for us to teach > the kids better nutrition. > Responsibility really lies with the family. > I guess I am from the old school [i was lucky]. > My dad said: " If so and so wants to put her head in > a bucket of crud, does that mean you need to? " > So, kids should learn alternative thinking and > solutions. > Lesson learned from the olden days! > Thanks for listening. > Barb > Mesa, AZ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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