
Would you be happy for your gran to eat this? Disturbing 'slop' photo from Aussie aged care home sparks uproar - with a celebrity coming under fire
The meal, described as 'abhorrent' with an 'off-putting odour', featured a white blob of what appeared to be reconstituted potato alongside pureed green and brown mounds.
LinkedIn user Denise Abrahams shared the image to social media, claiming the quality of the food left a visitor to an unnamed residential facility run by a major commercial aged care provider 'shocked'.
Given the scene, Ms Abrahams questioned the effectiveness of taxpayer-funded nutrition programs such as those offered by the Maggie Beer Foundation - the charity started by the celebrity chef to improve food in aged care.
'I was annoyed that this still exists in light of the many millions paid to Maggie Beer to solve the problem of getting fresh, nutritious food served in facilities and other claimed initiatives by government for this purpose,' she posted.
Hundreds weighed in on the controversy, with many calling the quality of the food a national disgrace.
Some labelled the meal 'inhumane', while others accused aged care providers of putting profit before people.
'This is absolutely unacceptable,' said one.
'We are talking about feeding the most vulnerable members of our communities, our elders, and this is what's being served.
'A chemically processed, nutritionally empty plate that wouldn't pass in a school cafeteria, let alone a residential care facility.
'If we wouldn't serve this to our kids or our pets, why are we giving it to our elders under the guise of care?'
Be Fit Food owner Kate Save said the problem with most aged care facilities was the budget allocated to meals rarely met the needs of residents.
However, another person argued that while he wasn't excusing the poor quality of the food pictured, some people in aged care had dysphagia and other eating disorders that required food to be a mushy consistency.
'Anglicare has a food factory where they actually spend a lot of effort crafting and trialling to produce 'interesting' food to meet this need,' he said.
A government aged care sector performance report released this month identified food and nutrition as a top three risk area for the industry.
Between January and March 2025 staff from the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission visited 88 dining rooms across Australia to monitor the dining experience of people receiving care at those services.
The most common issue was staff incorrectly preparing or providing texture-modified food and thickened fluids.
It found the poor quality of meals was considered a result of 'cost-cutting' measures in place within the service and the need to source cheaper ingredients.
There were also concerns that resident nutritional plans were not followed and contributed to weight loss amongst residents due to insufficient food quantities and inadequate nutrition.
The Commission has established a Food, Nutrition and Dining Advisory Support Unit and hotline to help aged care staff and providers to deliver higher quality and more nutritious meals to people in aged care.
In 2025, an impact report from Maggie Beer's foundation claimed the program had improved food standards for 9000 aged care residents, employed 13 chef trainers nationwide, and conducted 157 menu appraisals over the past decade.
But with more than 200,000 Australians living in aged care, critics say the reach is still limited.
A survey commissioned by the foundation and conducted by Flinders University's Aged Care Food and Nutrition Research Team found just 67 per cent of aged care residents were satisfied with the food they received.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
The UN's war on trans fat must not come at the cost of nutrition in Africa
For many of the world's poorest, a simple glass of milk can make a big difference where dietary diversity is limited. As a rich source of micronutrients like B12, calcium, zinc, and essential fatty acids, which are critical to children's healthy development, milk is one of the most affordable and accessible nutrient-dense foods in rural and low-income areas. We must be careful, therefore, that a new United Nations declaration that seeks to eliminate trans-fatty acids to reduce diet-related illness does not unintentionally affect access to this important food, along with other nutritious forms of dairy and meat. To avoid a potentially harmful misstep and protect the rights of the poorest to basic, healthy nutrition, UN negotiators must draw a clear line between animal-source foods, which contain low levels of trans-fatty acids, and industrially-produced sources with much higher concentrations presenting greater risk to health. The UN's push to address the growing global burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including conditions like heart disease and diabetes, is essential and welcome. In Ethiopia where I am based, for example, NCDs such as heart disease, chronic respiratory diseases, and diabetes are a growing public health concern, recently ranking among the leading causes of death. This is increasingly the case across many developing countries, where healthcare systems are less equipped to diagnose or manage related health consequences. To be effective, interventions like the proposed declaration need to include adequate attention to the realities faced by developing nations. This includes acknowledging complex nutritional paradoxes, such as alarming rates of infant undernutrition, including stunting, which not only increases the risk of obesity and diet-related illness in later life, but also stunts brain development and impacts educational and economic outcomes in adulthood. Counter-intuitively, children who suffer from undernutrition in their early life are more likely to suffer obesity and NCDs as adults. This cruel irony of early deprivation, often referred to as the 'developmental origins of health and disease,' underscores the critical need for a careful, holistic approach to nutrition from early life onwards. The impacts of childhood undernutrition are felt far and wide – undernutrition can cost developing nations up to 16 per cent of GDP, and the cost will be much higher if the burden of NCDs are included. The declaration to reduce trans-fatty acid consumption should focus on industrial sources and help shape Africa's food systems by pushing for policies that prevent trans-fatty acids from entering diets through processed foods. It should guide the development of a healthier food processing industry – one that limits or eliminates industrial trans-fats altogether. Industrially-produced trans-fatty acids pose a significantly higher health risk than those that occur naturally in small amounts in dairy and meat due to their concentrations. For comparison, industrial trans-fatty acids can reach concentrations of up to 60 per cent of fat content in processed foods, whereas natural trans-fatty acids in animal-source foods typically make up just 2–5 per cent. On the other hand, it is important to recognise that even small amounts of animal-source foods – just a glass of milk or a single egg per day – come packaged with critical nutrients, which protect against nutrient deficiencies. Research by the International Food Policy Research Institute, for example, has shown that regular milk consumption corresponds with significant reductions in child stunting across low- and middle-income countries. This means that in communities facing chronic food insecurity, animal-source foods such as milk are not just beneficial, but essential. More than 700 million people around the world face hunger each year, many of them in Africa. We therefore must be careful not to design policies that unfairly limit access to these foods, or else we risk undermining efforts to improve diets and nutrition in low-income settings. It is crucial, then, as UN negotiators prepare the final wording of the resolution on trans-fatty acids, that a distinction is made between those found in animal-source foods and those in industrially-produced foods. The declaration must endeavour to foster a food systems transformation trajectory that eliminates trans-fats from processed foods as the food processing industry evolves in these settings. If we fail to do so, we risk inadvertently creating policies that further jeopardise the diets, nutrition and health of the most vulnerable by discouraging access to sources of important nutrients. If we do not effectively address undernutrition, the human cost could ironically increase the prevalence of NCDs by driving up childhood undernutrition. In many African settings, where the food processing industry is still in its nascent stages, we have an opportunity to take a different diet-centred path to developed nations and avoid the challenges that come with mass production of industrial trans-fatty acids. NCDs are a global health emergency demanding urgent action. This burden is growing, and falling heaviest on developing countries, as in Africa where diagnosis and treatment are limited and where NCDs are linked to undernutrition in childhood. Better diets and nutrition call for nuanced access and food systems transformation for all people and the planet.


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Wheelchair-bound NRL star Alex McKinnon is hit with two shocking insults by the club he was playing for when he was paralysed
Former NRL star Alex McKinnon has been slugged with two insults by the Newcastle Knights after going to watch his former club take on the Melbourne Storm on Saturday afternoon. McKinnon - who was left paralysed by a horrific on-field accident against the Storm in 2014 - watched the Knights slump to their 11th loss of the season, going down 32-14. The one-time backrower sat on the hill at McDonald Jones Stadium, and astonishingly had to pay for his own general admission ticket, News Corp reported. Newcastle also chose that home game against the Storm to promote a spinal support organisation called Stronger Together. To add to what many fans would see as highly insensitive timing, the club did not ask McKinnon if he wanted to be involved in the initiative with Stronger Together. The incident comes after reports that powerbrokers at Newcastle are preparing to dump coach Adam O'Brien at the end of the footy season, and other reports that the team's best player, Kalyn Ponga, is looking to switch codes to rugby union before his contract expires in 2027. Last month, it was announced that McKinnon would be taking a big step forward in his new career with healthcare company, Alike Health. The 33-year-old joined the specialist healthcare firm as its Head of Growth and Partnerships, having previously worked with the organisation as a Lived Experience Consultant. The firm revealed that McKinnon's role is now changing within the company, with the former footy player now offering Psychosocial Recovery coaching. 'With a background in Psychological Science, professional sport, and a lived experience of resilience and change, Alex brings genuine understanding and practical support to those navigating psychosocial disability,' Alike wrote on Instagram. In his new role as a Psychosocial Recovery Coach, McKinnon provides support to those suffering from psychosocial disabilities. The role aims to help individuals regain their independence and get back to doing things they enjoy. It came after McKinnon announced earlier this year that he was set to commence a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree at the University of Newcastle. He had previously obtained a Bachelor's Degree in Psychology. McKinnon, a father-of-three had faced an uncertain future 11 years ago after one of the most shocking incidents in Australian sporting history. McKinnon fractured his C4 and C5 vertebrae in a horror tackle during that game against Melbourne in 2014. He'd played 49 NRL games before tragedy struck - and as he later revealed, he knew as soon as he hit the ground that his life was about to change forever. 'I knew straight away,' he told ABC journalist Stan Grant in 2020. 'I remember hearing the noise, I remember trying to move but not being able to, I remember players surrounding me and looking at me - clear conversations, I could hear everything. 'I really just felt embarrassed ... I suppose it takes you back to being a man and what your identity is there - strong, unflappable, unwavering - I just felt that it was embarrassing that I was laying there, unable to move, and I just felt like a real failure.' Five days after the tackle, he woke up to a medical practitioner pricking him with a pin to determine where his paralysis began and classify the injury. On the sixth day, doctors at The Alfred Hospital gave Mr McKinnon, his parents and then-girlfriend Teigan Power the devastating news that it was very unlikely he would ever walk again. In his emotional biography, Unbroken, McKinnon wrote: 'I began to yell and sob as tears streamed down my face.' 'I'm f***ing over this,' he yelled to his parents. 'I don't want to be here, this is making me sick to my stomach, why can't I just die? Why can't you just kill me? Why are you going to put me through this? How can you let me live like this? Is it just for you? I'm happy to die. I want this over.' He would later split from wife Teigan Power in 2022, but has found love again with new partner Lily Malone. The pair are understood to have started dating while the 33-year-old was studying at university. McKinnon was working as head of recruitment with the Knights until January 2022, when he left the role in order to focus on his studies.


Daily Mail
7 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Bride's secret weapon: I lost 20kg in nine months after years of over-eating - here's the exact diet I follow to keep it off for good
A young woman has shared how she shed an impressive 20kg in the nine months before her dream wedding - before losing a further 15 and keeping it off for good. Bella Moro, a Sydney entrepreneur, had struggled with her weight and relationship with food since she was 12 and spiralled through seemingly endless cycles of obsessive dieting, binge eating and self-hate. Despite being an active, self-confessed 'tomboy' as a tween, when Bella hit puberty her weight ballooned and she was diagnosed with insulin resistance, a precursor to diabetes. This kicked off a carousel of medical appointments, diets, naturopaths and food restrictions, all while dealing with severe hormonal acne and plummeting self-esteem. Growing up in an Italian household, Bella was met with a conflict: food was both a passion and a daily battleground. 'Everything revolved around pasta, bread and potatoes. I had to tell my mum to stop cooking for me at one point because I was trying to take control of my health,' Bella told FEMAIL. 'At family events people would shove food in my face and saying no felt like I was doing something wrong.' Despite periods of significant weight loss over the years, by the end of 2022, when Bella was 24, she tipped the scales at 85kg - her heaviest weight yet and one deemed unhealthy for her petite frame. Before and after: A young woman has shared how she shed an impressive 20kg in the nine months before her dream wedding - before losing a further 15 and keeping it off for good She no longer recognised herself and knew it was time to make a change. 'I was the biggest I had ever been in my life, I put off my wedding and I knew if I didn't do something drastic I wouldn't walk down the aisle or have my dream of being a mum one day,' she said. 'All I could think about was my next meal, I couldn't control my hunger and my thoughts. It was always about the next meal, all I would crave was carbs and I was never full. 'I could eat a whole meal and be hungry an hour later and the weight just kept stacking on. It was mind numbing, I could barely focus on anything else in my life and it was affecting my relationship and my business.' It was on a trip to Port Douglas with her sister that she made a life-changing decision. Her sister had just undergone a gastric sleeve surgery, had found love and was absolutely glowing with confidence. 'I want some of that,' she recalled saying at the time. Within a week she'd quit her $100,000 a year job, booked gastric sleeve surgery for herself and started plans for a total life overhaul - including launching a new dog care business born out of her side hustle. The surgery was a success but her recovery encompassed physical, mental, and emotional aspects. For the first three months post-surgery, she had to relearn how to eat as she progressed from liquid meals to toddler-sized purées, before eventually reintroducing solid food. For the first time in her life, her body rejected processed food and sugar, triggering physical reactions when she tried to overeat. Her portion sizes shrank. So did the inner noise. 'The surgery created a clear physical feedback loop - overeating or eating certain foods (like cake or processed snacks) led to sickness or a sugar rush,' Bella explained. 'This has resulted in greater awareness and control over my food choices and quantity.' As for why Bella chose this route over weight loss injections like Ozempic and Mounjaro? 'This was a permanent solution after years of unsuccessful diets and quick fixes,' she said. 'I wanted a lasting change without reliance on medication and I'd received referrals and encouragement from others who had the procedure which played a large role in my decision.' Nine months later, Bella walked down the aisle at her dream wedding 20kg lighter. 'I definitely felt and looked my absolute best. It was extra special as well because I was able to fit into my mum's wedding dress that I got redone from the 90s to be more modern,' she said. 'I look back on the photos and the wedding video captured and absolutely love every single one of them because I loved the way that I looked; without the surgery I definitely don't think I would have walked down the aisle that year or maybe ever at all.' By the one year mark post-surgery, she had lost over 30kg. Shortly after the wedding she achieved another of her dreams with the birth of a healthy baby boy; she gained 15kg during pregnancy and again managed to lose the weight with ease. 'The weight started to fall off in those first few weeks postpartum, but I was also mindful not to fall into old habits,' she said. 'I focused on fuelling my body properly, moving it daily with walks, and getting back into work which brought structure, joy, and purpose back into my life.' Her confidence had skyrocketed. She started showing up on camera, proudly becoming the face of her brand MyCavoodle - her side hustle turned boutique dog product business that now turns over an incredible $1.1million annually. Despite being kept busy as a mum and entrepreneur, Bella has kept the weight off and is fitter and healthier than ever before. 'I used to binge eat out of boredom or stress - constantly clock-watching in corporate,' she said. 'Now I'm running a business I'm obsessed with, juggling a baby, and barely have time to sit down, let alone overeat.' Her diet now focuses on whole foods, high-protein meals, and fresh fruit and vegetables. She also avoids packaged and processed foods, saying they taste like 'poison'. 'Your body will tell you when you've had enough - you just have to listen. That voice in your head saying "put the fork down"? That's the one I follow now,' she said. In terms of exercise, Bella swears by long walks. Prior to surgery, Bella exercised much more, including gym sessions and high daily step counts. Now, dietary habits and portion control are her main focus. And to those who might claim she 'cheated' with her decision to undergo gastric sleeve surgery? 'That's okay. I'm at peace with people thinking that because I know how much it's drastically helped me and changed my life for the better... I don't really care what other people think anymore,' she said. 'I'm just happy my life isn't controlled by what I put in my mouth and that I'm not constantly thinking about food 24/7. There's not just one way to lose weight. Everyone has to figure out what works best for them.' Bella's diet before Morning: Breakfast consisted mainly of processed carbs such as cereals or multiple slices of Italian bread, often topped with butter or Nutella. Occasionally oats or toast were included Mid-morning snacks: Frequent snacking on processed foods like chips, chocolates, lollies or fruit. Snacks were picked up or brought in Lunch: Typically more carbs with sandwiches, processed foods from the canteen (such as nuggets), or takeaway options. Sometimes it included salad, but there was often a desire to snack even after lunch. Office events could mean pizza or chips too Afternoon snacks: Continued snacking on chips, chocolates, lollies, ice cream, or other processed foods Dinner: Family meals were carb-heavy, including potatoes, schnitzel, pasta, lasagna, or chicken and chips. Portions tended to be large, and she often ate the same amount as other family members Evening: Occasional late snacks, especially during COVID Bella's diet now Morning: Breakfast is now lighter and usually delayed. The day often begins with coffee rather than food followed by protein in the form of eggs, bacon, mushrooms, avocado -with maybe a small slice of toast Mid-morning snacks: Snacking is now rare. Busy routines mean sometimes forgetting to eat, and there's little urge to snack between meals. Lunch: Lunch is often made up of leftovers, with a continued emphasis on protein. Portion sizes are far smaller than before. Carbs such as pasta, risotto, or pizza are still included occasionally, but in moderation (e.g., only eating a quarter of a pizza) Afternoon snacks: Rarely snacks in the afternoon. The focus is on main meals not mindless eating Dinner: Meals are still varied but much more controlled in portion size. The emphasis is on protein (meat and vegetables) rather than carbs, and there's a conscious effort to avoid overeating. Evening: Evening eating is minimal and not a regular habit For Bella, what worked best was a method that would allow her to stay healthy without intense gym routines, early mornings or stressful schedules. 'You see a lot of people who preach getting up at 5am and being in the gym lifting heavy weights and only eating dry chicken rice and beans and that's great for people without any responsibilities besides themselves,' she said. 'But what about the women at home who have babies, a household and a business to run and can't just wake up and leave to go to the gym in the morning to exercise?' Now an advocate for doing whatever possible to be 'your best self', Bella hopes to inspire Aussies to make the hard decisions and put themselves first - even if the road ahead looks a little scary. 'Everything has changed. I love the way I look, I've had a healthy pregnancy, become a first-time mum, and built a million-dollar business, all within two years,' she said. 'When I was in survival mode, constantly tired, emotionally eating, and avoiding the mirror, I became lazy in other areas too. But when I started backing myself, doing the inner work, and treating my body with respect, everything changed. 'I've healed a lot of my relationship with food, people around me, my body, myself and my identity. I'm no longer scared to stand up for myself and my beliefs around food and I no longer hide behind baggy clothes or avoid photos. 'I feel strong, focused, and finally at peace with who I am.'