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peanut butter 380x380 When food is a killer.

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Hi, my name is Jo. I am a nice person, not at all unreasonable. If you met me you’d like me. We’d have coffee and get along. But you hate me, because I’m the reason you can’t pack peanut butter, Nutella or trail mix in your child’s lunch.

My son Philip was born with food allergies to egg and nuts. Anaphylaxis is not like a gluten ‘allergy’. When he eats egg or nuts his body mistakes the protein in these foods for poison and tries to close all his airways to prevent the poison coming in….resulting in asphyxiation. Philip is eight this year and some of his nut allergies are getting better but if he has any of the foods he is allergic to, he starts to cry. He feels dread and panic. His face swells, his tongue swells, he becomes flushed, distressed and he needs a shot of adrenalin in his thigh to prevent death.

When I fell pregnant with my first child I planned to be a cool, calm and collected career mum. I planned to keep working, hire help and raise a relaxed and loving child. From day one he vomited my breast milk. We thought it was reflux. I persevered for weeks but he vomited so much I became worried, so I switched to thickened formula and he started to thrive. It wasn’t until we were on a holiday in Tweed Heads that I first suspected food allergies.

We were having lunch in a shopping centre food court. Philip was five months old and loved sucking on my fingers due to teething. I’d just eaten some chicken schnitzel. He sucked on my finger, began to cry and broke out in hives. We rushed him to hospital and they said they couldn’t confirm a food allergy but said it was definitely an allergy to something.

Back in Sydney he was tested at Sydney Children’s Hospital. He came back as allergic to egg, nuts, dog hair and dust mites. I was told to keep him away from these foods until he turned two. Then we’d re-test him and see if he’s improved.

I was devastated. How could my son be allergic to food? I’m Italian. I ate everything while I was pregnant. I had a healthy pregnancy and there were no food allergies in my family. He was the first and we all had trouble dealing with it.

When a food allergy is first diagnosed, you panic. You throw out all foods that list the allergens as an ingredient. You pressure your family not to serve the offending foods in your child’s presence. Allowing the foods he’s allergic to in the same room as him felt like leaving a loaded gun on a table within reach. You don’t eat out. You slap foods out of your child’s hands when you suspect it isn’t safe. When food becomes deadly, life as you know it is gone forever.

I am happy that nuts are banned in pre-schools and primary schools. The kids are too little to look after themselves and are too small to handle exposure to their allergen. It might comfort you to know that I suffer as a result of this ban too. My four-year-old isn’t allergic to anything. He only eats Nutella sandwiches so I struggle to pack him foods he likes for his pre-school days. He likes ham wraps but if I run out of ham I have a problem because he won’t touch jam or vegemite. Peanut butter is out. It’s frustrating.

That being said, I would be devastated if any food I packed resulted in the death of a child. Have you ever thought of that? How would you feel if the peanut butter sandwich you snuck into their lunchbox made another child gravely ill? How would your child feel? Yes it’s sometimes tough to think of healthy foods to pack in their lunch but we go to so much effort to keep children safe, isn’t this worth the effort too? We walk them to the bus, if we see a lost child we help them…this is just another way we as a community take care of our children.

Just before school began this year, news came through that Ammaria Johnson, a seven-year-old Virginia girl, died after an allergic reaction at school when she was given a peanut by another child. The school didn’t have an epiPen. Another preventable death.

Food allergies are reaching epidemic proportions. Seven years ago when my son was first diagnosed most people had heard of peanut allergies but were surprised by the egg and tree nuts. So was I, so I still am.

Doctors don’t know why food allergies are occurring. There are so many differing theories. My family laughed when I told them about the ‘too clean’ theory. My house is anything but squeaky clean. They know families with a history of asthma and eczema tend to have allergic children. It’s so frustrating. Food isn’t meant to kill, but sometimes it does. Thank you for following the guidelines. Thank you for not packing peanut butter and Nutella in your children’s school lunches. I will continue to work to enforce the regulations and report breaches to keep not only my child safe but all children with food allergies. I can’t relax and I can’t let up because last year Philip was given foods twice in class that I hadn’t checked. Mistakes are still made. We have to keep food allergies top of mind. I make mistakes, my son’s teach made mistakes and more mistakes will be made.

Keeping children safe in any regard takes a layered approach, not just one. To keep them safe from drowning we teach them to swim, build pool fences, supervise them and learn CPR. To keep them safe from abduction we teach them about stranger danger, keep an eye out for strangers around schools, supervise them and teach them how to get away. To keep them safe from food allergies we teach child carers about food allergies, keep them away from allergens as much as possible, teach them not to share food at school and keep epiPens nearby. Save your peanut butter, Nutella and trail mix for home.

Jo Abi is the author of the book How to Date a Dad: a dating guide released by Hachette Livre Australia. Her first love is being a mum closely followed by writing about being a mum. You can read more about her many and various exploits here.

Do you have or know someone who has food allergies? How do you handle it?

Comments

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296 Comments so far

  1. Tamara

    None of my children are allergic to food or have any food intolerances and I still find meals a challenging experience at times, just because of fussy eaters – I cannot fathom the stress that it causes to have to watch what your child is eating at all times because they could become gravely ill in a matter of moments. No grumbling here about keeping nuts out of school lunches, I actually think it’s becoming second nature to most parents to check the food they pack is free of nut products. Good luck to you and your son, Jo.

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  2. kirstys

    My child isn’t going to die if they don’t have peanut butter in their lunch… but your child could. That’s a pretty simple reasoning in my mind. I was actually really surprised to find that our school is NOT nut free, even though we have anaphylactic children. In fact, my daughter had an anaphylactic child in her class last year (and again this year) who has egg, nut, soy allergies. Our blanket rule in this house is no peanut butter on school days so that he stays safe. His mother has no problem with the kids having egg sandwiches/quiches as his reaction to that isn’t as strong or fast as the nut allergies but we all keep those to weekend lunches as well. It may be a mild inconvenience for us, but it also means that we’re doing our part to keep him safe and I’d far rather the inconvenience than visiting him in hospital… or worse.

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  3. Jess in Melbourne

    Who on earth has a problem with preschools/schools banning nuts..??

    Sounds 100% completely beyond reasonable to me.

    Young children haven’t developed enough to understand consequences of eating certain items, nevermind not having the ability to analyse a food item’s possible ingredients. Plus no teacher can monitor young children and what they eat for the whole day. It’s that simple.

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  4. riff_raff

    My son too is allergic to peanuts and has a small allergy to eggs. He’s never actually eaten peanuts, but rubbed peanut butter into his eyes (lunch + too tired = mistake!) and his eyes swelled shut within seconds. Thank god I lived in a tiny country town with the hospital two seconds away.
    Now he is nearly four and at kindy this year. His teachers have already had to send emails to everyone .. again!!.. to remind parents not to bring peanut butter etc to school. I dread getting a phonecall saying my son’s at hospital because they’ve had to give my son a dose of his adrenalin..
    Scary.
    I had asthma as a child, no one in my family has allergies, but both my babies had eczema and asthma. All adds up….sort of.

    PLEASE PLEASE don’t send peanut butter sandwiches to kindys or school!! Leave it for at home…As Jo said – you don’t want to be responsible for making a child gravely ill!!

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  5. Sydney

    I don’t know why you put apostrophes around the allergy after gluten, do you not think that’s a ligitimate problem for people as well? I completely agree with everything you have written in your post, that not giving you child peanut butter sandwiches is a small inconvinience in the grand scale of things, but don’t take away from other people’s issues with food. It may not be life-threatening but it’s still something some people have to deal with every single day of their lives. If you didn’t mean it in that way, I apologise in advance.

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    • Karls

      I’m with you Sydney. That really ‘stood out’ for me too.

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      • Anonymous

        Ditto. My daughter is a ceoliac (I can never spell) amongst other allergies, I’ve witnessed the pain it’s horrific.. Her biggie is strawberries, same as any peanut allergy, but not banned from her school even though it could kill her

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    • Jess in Melbourne

      I think the ” marks are used only to highlight the difference in the severity of the conditions.

      Correct me if I’m wrong – my gastroenterologist told me this – but a lot of gluten intolerances essentially aren’t life threatening (I was getting tested for it).

      Especially in children – a lot of peanut allergies are.

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      • Cath

        Actually, gluten allergy in the form of coeliacs disease IS life threatening, with sufferers considerably more susceptible to stomach and bowel cancers… a slower, less urgent risk, but a risk none the less. Still, I didn’t find the “” offensive at all… I think that there are a lot of misconceptions out there about the difference between intollerences, allergies and I am just avoiding such and such by choice.

        My little man is allergic to tree nuts and peanuts, dust mite and dog hair and has grown out of allergy to bananas and eggs. Our school doesn’t ban nut products, but all the teachers have radios when on yard duty, photos of the anaphylactic children are posted everywhere and my son has his own bin in the classroom to dispose of his rubbish. My initial reaction to this approach was fear, but we have learnt to deal with it.

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        • Lu

          Sure, after long term exposure to gluten they have higher risks, but they are not going to drop dead within 20 minutes of having gluten.

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          • Jess in Melbourne

            Precisely.

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          • Anonymous

            Some people do have a wheat allergy that can result in anaphylaxis.

            I know people who have been rushed to hospital after being taking a bite of regular bread, thinking it was gluten free. For some it is an immediate threat to their health.

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          • Cath

            I realise that Lu, I’m just saying that for someone with a gluten allergy and a son with and anaphylactic peanut allergy, I DIDN’T find the use of the “” offensive in the article.

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            • Sydney

              Sorry Jo it wasn’t my intention to take away from the severity of your son’s condition, I just don’t like it when people don’t believe that ceoliac disease is real (I can’t spell it either!). I can’t imagine having a child running around in the world deadly allergic to something that most people don’t think twice about eating and the stress and worry that must cause you, actually I can’t imagine having a child full-stop, but that’s another comment for another day!

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  6. Susan

    Jo, as a mum of four I have no problem excluding nuts from the kids’ lunches. We also do nut-free parties as a couple of our friends face the same challenges as you. Please know there’s no eye-rolling from me nor anyone I know on this point. Good luck with your beautiful boy.

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  7. Luc

    Thanks for a great piece. Yes, it is a very mild inconvenience to have to lay off the peanut butter in school lunches. But that is NOTHING compared to having a child die, or end up in hospital.

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    • Jo

      Exactly Luc. I really don’t find packing a nut-free lunch for my son and daughter a problem. I don’t understand why people make such a big deal about.

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