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Tri-State Hospitals Cope With Growing Demand for Kosher


kosher1.gifIn the Tri-State area’s giant hub of kosher food, an industry that is a major kosher-food provider often gets overlooked. Yet the main hospitals in New York City, as well as hospitals in other major markets, are dealing with an increased demand by patients, their families, visitors and staff. At the Maimonides Medical Center in the heart of Boro Park in Brooklyn, the entire kitchen is completely glatt kosher, producing approximately 3,500 kosher meals a day. It is the only hospital in the region that serves kosher exclusively in all its facilities, including its cafeterias and even at staff meetings. Manhattan’s Mount Sinai Medical Center has a small in-house kitchen, certified by the Orthodox Union, with both a dairy and meat chef. It provides kosher food to about 100 of the medical center’s 900 patients. The kosher kitchen produces another 150 meals available for purchase in the cafeteria each day, and supplements catering at hospital events for kosher attendees.

Most other hospitals deal with lower volumes of kosher consumers, visitors and staff via their food services departments. They typically order kosher meals from local caterers and vendors. Lenox Hill Hospital and New York University Medical Center, for example, both in Manhattan, serve an average of 15 kosher patients a day in this way. Long Island Jewish Medical Center had its own kosher kitchen, but closed it down almost 20 years ago because it was not cost effective. The hospital still provides almost 100 kosher meals a day. The meals are typically frozen then heated before being served to patients, and supplies of kosher bread and dairy products are delivered fresh. One hospital nutritionist described how an increasing number of the standard packaged foods, such as cookies and juices, are becoming kosher certified and can be added to the kosher meals. Kosher food is also available for hospital personnel and visitors in the cafeterias. Usually the options are the same meals received by the patients, with an assortment of sandwiches and salads. All incoming food is sealed and supervised by the hospitals’ chaplain rabbi.

Despite outsourcing the kosher meals, hospitals strive to offer kosher patients a complete range of options. Staff nutritionists attempt to accommodate each patient’s strict dietary, cultural and personal preferences. The NYU Medical Center even orders sushi from Midtown Manhattan restaurant Circa NY. Hospital officials say that they have noticed an increase in the demand for kosher food, mostly for religious reasons. Kosher purveyors report increased inquiries from hospitals about kosher food products. A number of hospital food service personnel visited last November’s Kosherfest. Some nutritionists expressed concerns about the quality of some of the frozen meals for patients who clearly need better nutritional foods.

(Source: Kosher Today)



4 Responses

  1. you can add Beth Israel hospital (downtown manhattan) to the list. they have a cafeteria that is certified OU kosher so its great for all the frum staff (and there are plenty) that work there.

  2. IT MAY BE KOSHER, BUT HOSPITAL FOOD IS NOTORIOUSLY UNHEALTHY–FULL OF REFINED FLOUR AND SUGAR.

    IT DOESN’T MAKE SENSE. ONE THE ONE HAND, THE HOSPITAL CLAIMS IT WANTS TO HELP PEOLE OVERCOME THEIR DISEASES, BUT ON THE OTHER HAND, THEY DON’T SUPPORT THE PATIENT WITH PROPER NUTRITION.

  3. actually, in Beth Israel’s cafeteria, there is a lot of healthy food. just like in anywhere else, you make the choice what to eat.

  4. I have heard repeatedly that Orthodox Jewish patients who require salt-free diets end up going hungry because the only Kosher food which is provided to them is not salt-free. This is because the kosher caterers (who provide the frozen food packages to the hospitals) do not offer the option of salt-free meals. (The same problem probably exists for those who require a sugar-free diet.)

    The hospitals which are purchasing these kosher-frozen-meals need to “band together” to urge these caterers to offer salt-free and sugar-free foods for those who need it, but the hospitals have no motivation to do so (and, unfortunately, the caterers who provide these frozen foods don’t find it cost-effective) until larger numbers of patients and their families will begin to insist on this.

    I assume that this is not a problem in the Maimonides and Mount Sinai hospitals because their “in-house kitchens” are specifically designed for the hospitals’ needs – which have a much higher percentage of people who require salt-free or sugar-free diets than the general population. But the other hospitals, who are buying their kosher food from caterers, are dealing with suppliers who haven’t yet felt the need to provide salt-free and sugar-free meals.

    So these caterers need to be urged to provide salt-free and sugar-free diets – which would require patients and their families to band together, and to enlist the help of the hospitals’ Nutrition-staff (and not just the chaplains, whose “hands are tied”).

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