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The guest trays (hot food) are $3 charged to the department budget of what ever

unit orders the guest tray. This was mostly an issue on the pediatric floors

and did start to get out of hand (and wasn't ordered properly most of the time

anyway).

About a year ago we changed to sending up cold sandwiches at lunch & dinner to

the pediatric units for the nurses to pass out to the families. At lunch time

some days the Mc House brings sack lunches. Fountain drinks,

coffee, milk & juices are available for families at any time in the family

lounge. A box of donuts goes up at breakfast every day.

Standard trays are sent to both the adult & peds ER with cold sandwiches,

lemonade, fruit based on the census about an hour before trayline starts.

Breakfast is cold cereal, milk, coffee cake, juice. This cut down on diet

orders coming in at all times of the day from both ERs although we still get

them (with specific food requests from the Peds ER that have nothing to do with

what the child wants, it's what the desk clerk THINKS the child wants - can't

tell you how many times they order pizza for a kid with a documented dairy or

wheat allergy).

Holly Lee Brewer, MS RD CDE

Pediatric Dietitian, Las Vegas, NV

Cece wrote:

Hi All and Happy Friday!

I have a question for all of you in acute care. What is your policy

regarding guest trays for the friends and family of patients? I work

in a 56 bed acute care hospital, ICU, Maternity, Med/Surg., ER. Our

guest trays used to be free to anyone who wanted them and it got

totally out of hand. We were feeding entire families!! We changed our

policy to read that any family member who wanted a tray could purchase

one for $2.50. Each patient was only allowed one guest tray per meal

(so we don't feed entire families). Any 24 hour care giver of a

patient, law enforcement guard, or persons that the $2.50 would impose

a hardship could get a free tray. Really, we thought this was only

fair. We are meeting a lot of resistance. I would like to hear from

others who provide guest trays or if you don't provide guest

trays...what is your policy? Free or do you charge a fee, if so what?

Thanks!

Cece

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We charge $5 a tray for any guest tray. If a family has hardship for meals the

patient rep. can authorize a emergency meal ticket to the cafeteria, however

this is limited in amount.

At our rehab the nurses buy meal trays for family that stay with the patient and

provide care while they are here. We have done the freebie thing ion past and

it gets abused. We have even had people come in from the ER and go to the

antepartum area and help themselves to food in the refrigerator that is stocked

for patients to help themselves. The only free meals given out go to the MD's

(go figure) :)

guest trays

Hi All and Happy Friday!

I have a question for all of you in acute care. What is your policy

regarding guest trays for the friends and family of patients? I work

in a 56 bed acute care hospital, ICU, Maternity, Med/Surg., ER. Our

guest trays used to be free to anyone who wanted them and it got

totally out of hand. We were feeding entire families!! We changed our

policy to read that any family member who wanted a tray could purchase

one for $2.50. Each patient was only allowed one guest tray per meal

(so we don't feed entire families). Any 24 hour care giver of a

patient, law enforcement guard, or persons that the $2.50 would impose

a hardship could get a free tray. Really, we thought this was only

fair. We are meeting a lot of resistance. I would like to hear from

others who provide guest trays or if you don't provide guest

trays...what is your policy? Free or do you charge a fee, if so what?

Thanks!

Cece

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Last facility I worked for- $7.50 per tray- was a Room Service menu-

I've heard as much as $10 for ordering from Room Service menu. At

that facility, if the guest tray was for someone assisting with

the patient's care (i.e. wife spending the night to keep pt calm

and assisting with pt's care all the time), the tray was provided

complimentary- but the cost was split(eaten) between nursing and

dietary cost centers, which seemed like a good compromise. We didn't

give away free trays without a consensus among dietary, nsg and

social work that it was warranted.

At my current facility, we charge $5.00 per tray; still too low I

think for a full, hot meal that is delivered.

At a 100 bed sister hospital that just does cardiac care, they

provide 1 free guest tray per room/per day. One way to give away

freebies but have a limit on it.

>

> We charge $5 a tray for any guest tray. If a family has hardship

for meals the patient rep. can authorize a emergency meal ticket to

the cafeteria, however this is limited in amount.

> At our rehab the nurses buy meal trays for family that stay with

the patient and provide care while they are here. We have done the

freebie thing ion past and it gets abused. We have even had people

come in from the ER and go to the antepartum area and help

themselves to food in the refrigerator that is stocked for patients

to help themselves. The only free meals given out go to the MD's

(go figure) :)

>

> guest trays

>

>

> Hi All and Happy Friday!

>

> I have a question for all of you in acute care. What is your

policy

> regarding guest trays for the friends and family of patients? I

work

> in a 56 bed acute care hospital, ICU, Maternity, Med/Surg., ER.

Our

> guest trays used to be free to anyone who wanted them and it got

> totally out of hand. We were feeding entire families!! We

changed our

> policy to read that any family member who wanted a tray could

purchase

> one for $2.50. Each patient was only allowed one guest tray per

meal

> (so we don't feed entire families). Any 24 hour care giver of a

> patient, law enforcement guard, or persons that the $2.50 would

impose

> a hardship could get a free tray. Really, we thought this was

only

> fair. We are meeting a lot of resistance. I would like to hear

from

> others who provide guest trays or if you don't provide guest

> trays...what is your policy? Free or do you charge a fee, if so

what?

> Thanks!

>

> Cece

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Our guest trays are $15 a person !!!

guest trays

>

>

> Hi All and Happy Friday!

>

> I have a question for all of you in acute care. What is your

policy

> regarding guest trays for the friends and family of patients? I

work

> in a 56 bed acute care hospital, ICU, Maternity, Med/Surg., ER.

Our

> guest trays used to be free to anyone who wanted them and it got

> totally out of hand. We were feeding entire families!! We

changed our

> policy to read that any family member who wanted a tray could

purchase

> one for $2.50. Each patient was only allowed one guest tray per

meal

> (so we don't feed entire families). Any 24 hour care giver of a

> patient, law enforcement guard, or persons that the $2.50 would

impose

> a hardship could get a free tray. Really, we thought this was

only

> fair. We are meeting a lot of resistance. I would like to hear

from

> others who provide guest trays or if you don't provide guest

> trays...what is your policy? Free or do you charge a fee, if so

what?

> Thanks!

>

> Cece

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Even if you give them away, you have to count the " lost " revenue

to show administration- as well as the labor your spending to

make those trays. Also count meal equivalents to go towards

your stats/meals produced, etc.

> >

> > We charge $5 a tray for any guest tray. If a family has hardship

> for meals the patient rep. can authorize a emergency meal ticket

to

> the cafeteria, however this is limited in amount.

> > At our rehab the nurses buy meal trays for family that stay with

> the patient and provide care while they are here. We have done the

> freebie thing ion past and it gets abused. We have even had people

> come in from the ER and go to the antepartum area and help

> themselves to food in the refrigerator that is stocked for

patients

> to help themselves. The only free meals given out go to the MD's

> (go figure) :)

> >

> > guest trays

> >

> >

> > Hi All and Happy Friday!

> >

> > I have a question for all of you in acute care. What is your

> policy

> > regarding guest trays for the friends and family of patients? I

> work

> > in a 56 bed acute care hospital, ICU, Maternity, Med/Surg., ER.

> Our

> > guest trays used to be free to anyone who wanted them and it got

> > totally out of hand. We were feeding entire families!! We

> changed our

> > policy to read that any family member who wanted a tray could

> purchase

> > one for $2.50. Each patient was only allowed one guest tray per

> meal

> > (so we don't feed entire families). Any 24 hour care giver of a

> > patient, law enforcement guard, or persons that the $2.50 would

> impose

> > a hardship could get a free tray. Really, we thought this was

> only

> > fair. We are meeting a lot of resistance. I would like to hear

> from

> > others who provide guest trays or if you don't provide guest

> > trays...what is your policy? Free or do you charge a fee, if so

> what?

> > Thanks!

> >

> > Cece

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Cece

We are a similar sized facility. We have always routinely provided a guest tray

(one) , no charge, for a parent of a child 6 yo under (breastfeeding mom or

separation anxiety of a parent leaving the room when the child has not yet been

accustomed to being w/o a parent if they have not started school yet). We also,

at the request of a social worker or house supervisor, have provided free meals

to say a caregiver of a handicapped patient or an elderly spouse who has been

brought to the floor to visit and left w/o any means to get a tray (maybe no

cash or limited mobility). Other family members or guests can obtain a meal for

$5 or $6 if they pay the cashier ahead of time or they are usually encouraged to

come down to the cafeteria and buy what they want and are allowed to take it

back up. Free meals have also been provided to " Boarders " - new moms who have

to leave baby behind - they receive a coupon worth $5 and come to the cafeteria

to get their meal.

During an interim administration, the acting CEO expanded this to include

additional family members/circumstances at the discretion of the nurse.

Surprisingly, this has not gotten out of hand, maybe because we had done it the

above way for so long - if the nurse does call down, it is a justified request

routinely.

Polson

L. Polson R.D.

Clinical Nutrition Supervisor

County Memorial Hospital

PO Box 3011, 501 South Burma Avenue

Gillette, WY 82717

guest trays

Hi All and Happy Friday!

I have a question for all of you in acute care. What is your policy

regarding guest trays for the friends and family of patients? I work

in a 56 bed acute care hospital, ICU, Maternity, Med/Surg., ER. Our

guest trays used to be free to anyone who wanted them and it got

totally out of hand. We were feeding entire families!! We changed our

policy to read that any family member who wanted a tray could purchase

one for $2.50. Each patient was only allowed one guest tray per meal

(so we don't feed entire families). Any 24 hour care giver of a

patient, law enforcement guard, or persons that the $2.50 would impose

a hardship could get a free tray. Really, we thought this was only

fair. We are meeting a lot of resistance. I would like to hear from

others who provide guest trays or if you don't provide guest

trays...what is your policy? Free or do you charge a fee, if so what?

Thanks!

Cece

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We have guest trays where family can purchase for $5.00, and the tray goes up

withthe patient tray. We also give peds parents a meal ticket for a limit of

3.50 through the cafeteria line (we don't send up a tray, they pick up their

food and take it back up to the room) We also have tickets that we give out

randomly if a person has a patient that has been in ICU for an extended period

of time, we give them a few lunch tickets ( I believe a $4.00 limit). Now this

one has been abused in that we have had slug family members down at our door (

after the patient left ICU) wanting the tickets (of which we have stated that

they have met their limit). The other day we had a family member come down

wanting a ticket, yet she had come in about 9A then left the hospital and came

back about 11A in time to eat. Needless to say, someone has to monitor.

Cece wrote: Hi All and Happy Friday!

I have a question for all of you in acute care. What is your policy

regarding guest trays for the friends and family of patients? I work

in a 56 bed acute care hospital, ICU, Maternity, Med/Surg., ER. Our

guest trays used to be free to anyone who wanted them and it got

totally out of hand. We were feeding entire families!! We changed our

policy to read that any family member who wanted a tray could purchase

one for $2.50. Each patient was only allowed one guest tray per meal

(so we don't feed entire families). Any 24 hour care giver of a

patient, law enforcement guard, or persons that the $2.50 would impose

a hardship could get a free tray. Really, we thought this was only

fair. We are meeting a lot of resistance. I would like to hear from

others who provide guest trays or if you don't provide guest

trays...what is your policy? Free or do you charge a fee, if so what?

Thanks!

Cece

---------------------------------

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