Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I moved to south America 3 years ago and I have yet to find a kid that is allergic to peanuts... I have 3 kids in school and this issue does not exist here
So what are you saying? That peanut and tree nut allergies do not exist?
They don't exist here, that's for sure
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I moved to south America 3 years ago and I have yet to find a kid that is allergic to peanuts... I have 3 kids in school and this issue does not exist here
So what are you saying? That peanut and tree nut allergies do not exist?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of anyone talk about their kids' allergies that weren't "very severe." It's like there's no other kind. Their kids are always "very severe" and airborne is always a concern.
Statistically, it's impossible.
My child will throw up like a fountain 5 seconds after he ingests a peanut morsel. That's called a mild to moderate peanut allergy. No epi-pen.
What some PPs are missing is that some of these children are NOT RELIABLE when it comes to putting food in their mouths. My 9 year old son has ADD, and while he is usually careful, there is a non-negligible chance that one day he will accept something with peanuts and throw up. It has happened before. Imagine if he had a lethal reaction! I can totally understand a parent's anxiety in that situation, and if OP's child is in that category I sympathize with her frustration.
Allergies are terrible things - we should focus on energies on research into its causes and treatments, instead of blaming the victim or downplaying parents' fears.
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of anyone talk about their kids' allergies that weren't "very severe." It's like there's no other kind. Their kids are always "very severe" and airborne is always a concern.
Statistically, it's impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Oh get over yourself. I'm so sick of you allergy mommies demanding that the world bend over backwards for your precious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's wrong with children these days? Peanut allergies, autism. it's terrible!
Peanut allergies are probably due to the environment being too clean. The immune system overreacts when it gets a new protein exposure (peanuts) because it's been sitting around with nothing to do for a long time.
Autism is likely due to some environmental exposure switching on certain genes in some kids. One culprit may be flame retardant chemicals in furniture and pajamas. (It builds up in breast tissue, BTW, and gets into breast milk so the baby is exposed to both his environment and his food.)
Anonymous wrote:I moved to south America 3 years ago and I have yet to find a kid that is allergic to peanuts... I have 3 kids in school and this issue does not exist here
Anonymous wrote:Ok, my kid is allergic to peanuts and tree nuts, but that would not bother me. He knows better than eat someone elses snacks that have nuts. he has been taught to ask and if not sure not to eat.
get over yourself, people can eat what the hell they want including "GASP" peanuts
Anonymous wrote:I'm talking about a public school classroom that has two kids with severe peanut allergies. This is not one of those "manufactured on shared equipment" snacks where I can understand a parent forgetting to read the label or missing the fine print. This was a snack mix containing peanuts!
Anonymous wrote:I think it's great that some parents of allergic kids in Kindergarten also possess the exemplary reading skills to read the tiny print list of ingredients of every energy or Clif bar that may be given to them by a Mom having an off day.
Hats off to you, 20:42! That is fantastic that at the tender age of 5, he will never falter in his vigilance and so you don't require adult supervision. He's probably ready to babysit himself at this point, too, I would imagine!