Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Omg, you people are insane.
This. OP, please phase out the friendship. The other mother has no need for a "friend" like you.
Anonymous wrote:OP back: the other thread had people saying that they don’t allow their kids to eat PB in the morning before daycare since it could transfer from clothes or hands. There was no hand wiping going on here and 3 year olds aren’t dainty eaters. Would you bring an extra shirt if they got dirty with it to ensure you didn’t cross contaminate? Unlike pine nuts or gluten, a kid can become dangerously sick though simple contact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is severely allergic to tree nuts, as are several kids in his preschool, yet the school only insists that foods brought in be "peanut safe", and they even served banana nut muffins and a muffins for moms event. I guess peanuts are the most common target for allergy panic, and putting actions in place against them creates a sense of security.
As for me, I don't avoid bringing allergens to public places. I would not eat peanut butter on an airplane, but I'd bring sandwiches to a picnic. When your child has an allergy, you use common sense in monitoring what they eat and what they have contact with, but it's beyond your control in public places so you carry benedryl and an epi pen. Even with my child's history of severe reactions, I don't expect the public at large to accommodate.
Milk free, gluten free, egg free bread on your sandwiches, right? Because not all kids with allergies need to be removed from peanuts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is severely allergic to tree nuts, as are several kids in his preschool, yet the school only insists that foods brought in be "peanut safe", and they even served banana nut muffins and a muffins for moms event. I guess peanuts are the most common target for allergy panic, and putting actions in place against them creates a sense of security.
As for me, I don't avoid bringing allergens to public places. I would not eat peanut butter on an airplane, but I'd bring sandwiches to a picnic. When your child has an allergy, you use common sense in monitoring what they eat and what they have contact with, but it's beyond your control in public places so you carry benedryl and an epi pen. Even with my child's history of severe reactions, I don't expect the public at large to accommodate.
Milk free, gluten free, egg free bread on your sandwiches, right? Because not all kids with allergies need to be removed from peanuts?
My kids don’t eat sanchiches. They get complex carbohydrates elsewhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is severely allergic to tree nuts, as are several kids in his preschool, yet the school only insists that foods brought in be "peanut safe", and they even served banana nut muffins and a muffins for moms event. I guess peanuts are the most common target for allergy panic, and putting actions in place against them creates a sense of security.
As for me, I don't avoid bringing allergens to public places. I would not eat peanut butter on an airplane, but I'd bring sandwiches to a picnic. When your child has an allergy, you use common sense in monitoring what they eat and what they have contact with, but it's beyond your control in public places so you carry benedryl and an epi pen. Even with my child's history of severe reactions, I don't expect the public at large to accommodate.
Milk free, gluten free, egg free bread on your sandwiches, right? Because not all kids with allergies need to be removed from peanuts?
Anonymous wrote:My kid is severely allergic to tree nuts, as are several kids in his preschool, yet the school only insists that foods brought in be "peanut safe", and they even served banana nut muffins and a muffins for moms event. I guess peanuts are the most common target for allergy panic, and putting actions in place against them creates a sense of security.
As for me, I don't avoid bringing allergens to public places. I would not eat peanut butter on an airplane, but I'd bring sandwiches to a picnic. When your child has an allergy, you use common sense in monitoring what they eat and what they have contact with, but it's beyond your control in public places so you carry benedryl and an epi pen. Even with my child's history of severe reactions, I don't expect the public at large to accommodate.
Anonymous wrote:I have a peanut allergic child and yes, I think it's ok to bring a PBJ sandwich to a park.
Just follow some commen sense and it's all fine.
As the parent of a child with the allergy, I do not suffer any illusions that everyone else in the world is thinking about this and using every possible precaution. That is just delusional and also, not fair. That's why my kid has an epi-pen. On the slim chance that an exposure like this would cause a problem, I have a way to deal with it.