English size 14, and specifically in context of that model and her age....
I agree about the age-thing. When I was her age (20ish?) I was a size 8 to 10. However, it does depend on her height. If she's 5ft 11 (most models are tall), then a size 14, even at that age, would be healthy.
I work in a certain trust in the NHS I will not name. The canteen (privately-owned) has appalling food.
The breakfasts are over-priced cereal or a cheap(ish) cooked breakfast. Cheap and nasty catering over-cooked salty bacon, sausages that barely contain the EU-minimum standard 42% "meat" and are over-cooked. Sometimes black pudding that you could have someone's eye out with. Greasy hash browns. You can still get a cheaper cooked and better breakfast at a cafe, but as we only have 20 mins for breakfast break (30 mins unofficially), we can't leave.
The lunch time menu has one vegetarian option, which is usually pasta with vegetables and cheese, and it looks like slop. You usually get something wrapped in pastry. Or there is a cheap meat sloppy stodgy pasta dish - with lots of cheese and more slop. There is usually chips on. Often this is the only carb choice. What looks like tinned vegetables. Beans. Bisto-style gravy. And this is during the week, which is obviously catering for the Mon-Fri workers. Over the weekend, there is less. The vegetarian option is usually chips and beans at the weekend.
There have been a couple of privately-owned shops opened: A subway-style sandwich shop which serves stodgy sandwiches. There is a Greggs-style-everything-we-sell-is-wrapped-in-pastry-shop. A Costa (£4.50 for a sandwich), and you spend 10 mins waiting. There has been an M&S food recently opened, which is expensive, but the food is quite nice. Can't afford to shop there everyday.
Most of the private shops are closed over the weekends, because obviously everyone in a hospital works Mon-Fri 9 to 5, don't they?
There is literally NOTHING open over a night shift, because, again, everyone goes home at 5pm in a hospital. You HAVE to take your own food for a night shift, unless you want crisps, chocolate and a can of pop from a vending machine. You can't get even get a cup of tea.
I feel sorry for the poor barstewards who have been called in late at night because a member of their family is suddenly critically ill, and we end up giving them our tea from our staff (that we pay for) tea fund.
Oooo, I did go on a bit then......my point was about crap, unhealthy food being the only option in our hospital. Hardly health promotion, is it?