- Alcohol Change UK publishes Feeding Recovery Handbook to help local alcohol services unlock the health, wellbeing and social benefits of food-based activities
- Project promotes eating, cooking and food sharing within alcohol treatment services this Nutrition & Hydration Week (17-24 March 2025)
A new handbook to support local treatment services with delivering cooking and eating activities for people experiencing alcohol harm has been published by the charity Alcohol Change UK.
The Feeding Recovery Handbook, developed in partnership with two alcohol and drug treatment centres in Wales - Barod and The Nelson Trust - follows a six-month project between July and December 2024 funded by the Welsh Government and led by Alcohol Change UK.
It saw guests of the two facilities, located in Swansea and Cardiff, participate in a series of cooking and food sharing activities, where researchers explored the connection between alcohol, eating and social connection. Varying between lunch clubs and cookery classes, guests, staff, volunteers and researchers came together to make and share nutritious, easy meals including curries, stews, pasta dishes and cakes, while making space for conversations and social connection.
Using the learnings and experiences of participants, the team has developed a free Handbook to promote the health, wellbeing and social benefits of food–based activities within alcohol treatment provision, alongside offering practical guidance to services looking to deliver these activities.
The Feeding Recovery project was launched after a Swansea University report for Alcohol Change UK highlighted the complex relationship between harmful alcohol consumption and eating behaviours. Key findings suggest that when alcohol dominates a person’s life, food and nutrition is often relegated to a ‘secondary’ priority, while there appears to be a clear contrast between positive relationships with food, often associated with ‘love, care and pleasure’ and negative relationships with food, often compounded by the solitary and isolated nature of alcohol harm. In addition, the research identified a correlation between alcohol use and increased susceptibility to eating disorders, making the case for holistic support.
Andrew Misell, Director of Wales at Alcohol Change UK, said: