Standard 6: Food and Nutrition in Aged Care

 

A Necessary Reform — But Are Kitchens Being Set Up to Fail?

 

The introduction of Standard 6 – Food and Nutrition within Australia’s strengthened Aged Care Quality Standards marks a long-awaited reform in the way food is viewed within residential aged care. For decades, meals in many facilities were treated as a logistical function rather than a meaningful part of daily life. The new standard seeks to correct this by ensuring residents receive nutritious, appealing food that reflects their individual preferences, culture, and clinical needs.

 

In principle, this is a significant and welcome shift. Residents deserve the dignity of choice, quality food, and a dining experience that feels closer to home than to an institution.

 

However, while the regulatory focus has rightly been placed on resident outcomes, there is a growing concern among hospitality professionals across the sector:

 

Have aged care organisations fully considered what Standard 6 actually means for the kitchens expected to deliver it?

 

The Gap Between Policy and Practice

 

On paper, Standard 6 is clear and progressive. Residents should be able to:

• Choose what they eat

• Have culturally appropriate meals

• Receive texture-modified diets that are safe and appetising

• Enjoy attractive and well-presented meals

• Dine in welcoming environments

• Have their nutrition and hydration monitored

 

These expectations represent a move toward a hospitality-driven model of care.

 

But implementing this model requires much more than rewriting menus or adding an extra meal choice.

 

It requires structural change in how kitchens operate.

 

And in many cases, that conversation has not yet happened.

 

The Expanding Workload Behind Resident Choice

 

Resident choice is one of the central pillars of Standard 6. Yet the operational impact of this principle is often underestimated.

 

Introducing additional meal choices dramatically increases the complexity of kitchen production.

 

A single lunch service may now require:

• Multiple main meal options

• Several alternative dishes

• Texture-modified versions of each meal

• Individual dietary requirements

• Fortified options for residents at risk of malnutrition

• Last-minute resident requests or changes

 

What was once a straightforward service can quickly become a highly complex production environment.

 

At the same time, kitchen teams are also responsible for:

• HACCP compliance and documentation

• Temperature monitoring and food safety systems

• Stocktaking and food cost control

• Supplier management

• Menu planning and nutritional compliance

• Staff supervision and training

 

Yet in many facilities, these additional responsibilities have been introduced without significant increases in staffing or operational support.

 

The Silent Pressure on Kitchen Teams

 

Across Australia, cooks and chefs working in aged care are quietly absorbing the impact of these changes.

 

Unlike clinical staff, hospitality teams often operate with limited visibility at an executive level. When new regulatory requirements are introduced, the operational consequences for kitchens are not always fully understood.

 

The result can be a growing imbalance between expectation and capacity.

 

Kitchen teams are being asked to deliver restaurant-style choice, complex dietary compliance, and detailed documentation—often within the same labour models designed for institutional meal production.

 

The danger is not that kitchens are unwilling to adapt.

 

The danger is that they are expected to do so without the resources required to succeed.

 

Hospitality Must Be Recognised as Part of Care

 

If Standard 6 is to achieve its intended outcomes, the aged care sector must acknowledge a simple truth:

 

Food is not just hospitality — it is care.

 

Nutrition affects health, recovery, cognitive function, hydration, and overall wellbeing. Mealtimes are often the most anticipated part of a resident’s day.

 

Yet hospitality teams have historically been treated as a support service rather than a core component of resident care.

 

This mindset must change.

 

Kitchens require:

• Proper staffing models aligned with resident choice

• Investment in equipment and kitchen design

• Digital systems that reduce administrative burden

• Strong collaboration with clinical and lifestyle teams

• Recognition of the professional skills chefs bring to the sector

 

Without this support, Standard 6 risks becoming another compliance exercise rather than a genuine improvement in resident experience.

 

A Warning for the Sector

 

The intention behind Standard 6 is admirable. It aims to restore dignity, choice, and enjoyment to mealtimes for some of the most vulnerable members of our community.

 

But reforms cannot succeed if the operational backbone of the system—the kitchen—is overlooked.

 

If providers want restaurant-level choice and presentation, they must also be prepared to invest in restaurant-level hospitality thinking.

 

Otherwise, kitchens will continue to operate under increasing pressure, and the sector may find that the people tasked with delivering the new standard are the very ones being stretched beyond sustainable limits.

 

The Opportunity Ahead

 

Despite these challenges, Standard 6 represents an extraordinary opportunity.

 

It allows aged care to redefine dining as something far more meaningful than simply delivering meals on trays.

 

Facilities that embrace hospitality principles can transform their dining rooms into vibrant social spaces, where residents feel respected, heard, and cared for.

 

But this transformation will only succeed if organisations ask the difficult question:

 

Are our kitchens truly equipped to deliver the standard we are asking for?

 

Because behind every plate of food served in aged care is a kitchen team working tirelessly to make it happen.

 

And if the sector truly values resident choice and nutrition, it must also value—and support—the professionals responsible for delivering it.