New list includes more than 20 meal offerings designed to help fight disease.
April 21, 2026 | Loma Linda, California, United States | Ansel Oliver, Loma Linda University Health
Loma Linda University Health (LLUH) has launched an expanded therapeutic menu, with more than 20 whole-food, plant-based therapeutic meal offerings designed to treat and reverse chronic disease at the Troesh Medical Campus, one of six hospitals throughout the Loma Linda University Health system.
These additional items on LLUH hospital menus now include more meals built around vegetables, whole grains, beans, lentils, nuts, and seeds—each of which is served in a way that’s designed to support healing.

Sample list of food options included in the Loma Linda University Health therapeutic menu, with more than 20 whole-food, plant-based therapeutic meal offerings designed to treat and reverse chronic disease. [Image: Loma Linda University Health]
Options include sundried tomato humus with vegetables, chile relleno, southwest power salad, and club sandwich with tempeh. Also red lentil soup; chia and berry pudding parfait; beet, citrus, and walnut salad; and a variety of fruit and green smoothies.
The whole-food, plant-based therapeutic menu was developed by LLUH executive chefs, registered dietitians, and lifestyle medicine physicians. Patients can order from the menu, and doctors can order the new “whole-food plant-based therapeutic diet” for patients based on treatment recommendations.
LLUH’s new therapeutic menu is designed to be free of animal products, processed foods, oils, or refined sugars—as this is associated with a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, cancer, and all-cause mortality.
The new menu is an expansion of a 2023 initiative that offered limited therapeutic meals as part of the hospital menu for patients admitted to the hospital. The launch of the comprehensive whole-food plant-based therapeutic menu has been long awaited, with plans to expand to other hospital campuses in the future, Kaur said.
Using food as medicine is a growing evidence-based movement in health care, backed by the American Heart Association, the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and other leading medical organizations, Kaur said.
“The evidence is clear: What we eat can help prevent, treat, and even reverse chronic disease,” she said.
This initiative was supported by a grant from the Ardmore Institute of Health.
The original version of this story was posted on the Loma Linda University Health news site.