RBH hosts 'Bake Off' star Prue Leith

She was joined by Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Matt Hancock.

Author: Jonathan RichardsPublished 26th Oct 2020
Last updated 26th Oct 2020

During the two-hour visit to the Royal Berkshire Hospital, the celebrity and politicians met the Trust’s acting Chief Executive, Nicky Lloyd and Chair, Graham Sims and were given a behind the scenes look at the hospital’s vast catering operation and a tour of new facilities in the Minor Injuries Unit (MIU).

The visit was to mark the publication of the government’s Hospital Food Review, an independent study into hospital food, which was commissioned last year and was led by Bake Off star and cook, Prue Leith and Phil Shelley, who chaired the Review.

The Prime Minister and Ms Leith were given a guided tour of the hospital’s kitchens and restaurant area where around 750,000 patient meals and 267,000 staff and visitor meals are made and served each year. They visited the food storage rooms with Catering Manager, Daniel Cripps, and helped to pick the main ingredients for the day’s menus.

Meanwhile, the Health and Social Care Secretary was shown new X ray equipment, which will be brought into use this week for patients in the Emergency Department Minor Injuries unit (MIU).

This tailor made x-ray kit is in a specially created space in the Minor Injuries Unit, a short distance from the main Emergency Department (ED), formerly known as A&E. it will be able to scan 100 patients a day inside the MIU, easing pressure on ED teams and helping them to maintain safe social distancing in the ED waiting areas. Before the new kit was installed, staff had to escort patients on a lengthy and time consuming journey along the hospital corridor to the main X ray suite.

Speaking after the visit, Nicky Lloyd said:

“It was an honour to welcome our visitors today and to be selected as the hospital from which the NHS Food Review is launched. We are enormously proud of the work being done every day by our hard working catering teams to provide our staff, patients and visitors with good quality, healthy, varied and tasty meals. It’s a major logistical operation, dealing with 50 deliveries a week, preparing and cooking thousands of meals, maintaining sufficient supplies and devising menus that are nutritious and cater for a wide range of dietary, religious and ethical needs.

“The Chair and I were very pleased to be able to showcase our team’s work and I think that our visitors were very impressed by what they saw. Our catering systems are already in line with the proposals outlined in the Hospital Food Review - providing nutritious meals to aid a faster recovery, maintaining stringent food safety measures and paying heed to the environmental impact of our food chain."