Australia news live: poor hospital food adding to health costs; suspected crocodile remains found on Adelaide roadside

April 14, 2026:

Australia news live: poor hospital food adding to health costs; suspected crocodile remains found on Adelaide roadside

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21.58 BST

Poor hospital food adding to health costs, report says

Natasha May

Natasha May

Australian governments are spending $2.13bn every year feeding people in hospitals, aged care facilities and other public settings – low-quality food which contributes to poor diet and long-term health costs, a new report has found.

That investment (which equates to $6m a day) is one of the most powerful policy levers available to governments to improve national health outcomes, but it is currently marked by a near-exclusive focus on cost and scale, according to the report titled Transforming the Public Plate.

Commissioned by philanthropic organisation Macdoch Foundation and released by the newly formed Good Food Purchasing Australia (GFPA) initiative, it has found public food procurement is dominated by large suppliers and multinationals, with limited pathways for small, medium, local and First Nations producers to participate.

A meal from a hospital in Brisbane.
A meal from a hospital in Brisbane. Photograph: David Kelly/The Guardian

Without a national framework of standards to drive better outcomes from public food spending, the authors say Australia is falling behind other comparable countries such as the UK, EU and parts of the US.

Indeed, when Guardian investigated hospital food around the world, what Australia was serving paled in comparison with more wholesome options overseas. And a big part of the problem was not using fresh food but contracting out food preparation services to private companies to produce meals in bulk and deliver them frozen.

Bland, soggy slop or scratch-cooked chilli and pancakes? The best and worst hospital food around the world – in pictures

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Updated at 

Key events

22.16 BST

Melbourne to Thailand flight diverted after passenger’s alleged behaviour

Ima Caldwell

Ima Caldwell

A 37-year-old woman faced court on Monday after her alleged disruptive behaviour forced an international flight bound for Thailand to divert to Perth.

Australian Federal Police (AFP) said airline staff alerted them to an incident on Sunday where the passenger allegedly acted in an “increasingly erratic manner… before escalating to verbally abusing passengers and cabin crew”.

The flight diverted to Perth airport, where AFP officers boarded the aircraft and removed the woman after she allegedly refused to exit the aircraft as directed.

She appeared in Perth Magistrates Court on Monday, charged with one count of behaving in an offensive and disorderly manner endangering safety on an aircraft. The offence carries a maximum penalty of a $16,500 fine. She is due to reappear in court on 11 May.

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22.09 BST

Good morning, Nick Visser here to take over the blog. Let’s get to it.

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22.00 BST

Suspected crocodile remains dumped on Adelaide roadside

Ima Caldwell

Ima Caldwell

Reptile remains, believed to be from a crocodile, have been found dumped on the side of the road in Adelaide.

A spokesperson for the state’s environment and water department confirmed in a statement that department staff had “collected the remains of a reptile at Waterloo Corner”. They said:

double quotation markThe remains, which were dumped on the side of the road at Coleman Road, will be analysed in an effort to confirm the species and any other information.

It is not currently known how the remains came to be located at the site.

The department asked anyone with information to visit the Call it Out wildlife crime portal, or contact CrimeStoppers on 1800 333 000.

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Updated at 
21.59 BST

Food supplied to hospitals and nursing homes at risk due to fuel crisis

The authors say it is the first comprehensive assessment of public food procurement in Australia. Leah Galvin, co-lead of GFPA and report co-author, says:

double quotation markA different approach can increase the use of fresh, local produce, redirect spending to Australian farmers and producers, support the people working in public food service kitchens, and generate real benefits for Australia.

The authors also emphasise the prescience of the release of the report, which comes as Australia’s food system and supply chains, including food supplied to public institutions such as hospitals and aged care centres, are all at risk of breakdown due to the fuel crisis triggered by the war in Iran.

Dheepa Jeyapalan, also a co-lead of GFPA and co-author of the report, says:

double quotation markBetter public food procurement is not about spending more, it’s about spending smarter. The evidence is clear, public support is strong, and the solutions exist. Given the threat to our food system caused by the global fuel and fertiliser crisis, now is the moment for leadership.

Health experts have previously warned governments there needs to be a national food policy movement away from multinational corporations and towards healthier, more local food systems.

Australian diet set to worsen as national food policy is drawn up by profit-driven industry, experts warn

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Updated at 
21.58 BST

Poor hospital food adding to health costs, report says

Natasha May

Natasha May

Australian governments are spending $2.13bn every year feeding people in hospitals, aged care facilities and other public settings – low-quality food which contributes to poor diet and long-term health costs, a new report has found.

That investment (which equates to $6m a day) is one of the most powerful policy levers available to governments to improve national health outcomes, but it is currently marked by a near-exclusive focus on cost and scale, according to the report titled Transforming the Public Plate.

Commissioned by philanthropic organisation Macdoch Foundation and released by the newly formed Good Food Purchasing Australia (GFPA) initiative, it has found public food procurement is dominated by large suppliers and multinationals, with limited pathways for small, medium, local and First Nations producers to participate.

A meal from a hospital in Brisbane.
A meal from a hospital in Brisbane. Photograph: David Kelly/The Guardian

Without a national framework of standards to drive better outcomes from public food spending, the authors say Australia is falling behind other comparable countries such as the UK, EU and parts of the US.

Indeed, when Guardian investigated hospital food around the world, what Australia was serving paled in comparison with more wholesome options overseas. And a big part of the problem was not using fresh food but contracting out food preparation services to private companies to produce meals in bulk and deliver them frozen.

Bland, soggy slop or scratch-cooked chilli and pancakes? The best and worst hospital food around the world – in pictures

Read more

Share

Updated at 
21.58 BST

Welcome

Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I’m Martin Farrer with the top overnight stories and then it’ll be Nick Visser with the main action.

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