Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks to those who came with helpful advice. I appreciate it.
I sent the teacher an email asking to talk. We talked the very next day and she explained to me that DC sits on a different table where all the allergic kids sit and they monitor them very very close.
She assured me DC did not eat anything besides whatever was in the lunch box and suggested it could be crumbs that were on the table. She said they will take extra care to wipe the table properly and avoid cross contamination.
Besides all the snark I hope this thread can be used as some sort of PSA to educate those who are not familiar with the seriousness of food intolerance.
Again, thanks to those who tried to help.
OP - I have to ask, because you seem quite certain - do you believe the teachers? Also, didn't you know that your DD sat at a separate, allegen free table for snack? That seems to be something everybody I know with a child who has an allergy knows about (well in advance of the kid going to school).
I genuinely don't mean to be snarky, but you just seemed sooooo certain that it was the school/teachers. Do you have any idea what happened so you can prevent it in the future?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks to those who came with helpful advice. I appreciate it.
I sent the teacher an email asking to talk. We talked the very next day and she explained to me that DC sits on a different table where all the allergic kids sit and they monitor them very very close.
She assured me DC did not eat anything besides whatever was in the lunch box and suggested it could be crumbs that were on the table. She said they will take extra care to wipe the table properly and avoid cross contamination.
Besides all the snark I hope this thread can be used as some sort of PSA to educate those who are not familiar with the seriousness of food intolerance.
Again, thanks to those who tried to help.
Perhaps this could also be a good learning experience for you to not immediate accuse teachers of feeding her something with the allergen in it. Accusations of harming your child are really not good for building collaborative relationships. I hope you apologized to them for that.
I agree. This thread was the absolute opposite of a PSA for me. Blaming the teachers is really over the top. And of course the real cause is still a mystery, several weeks later.
Harping on the OP for being upset her daughter being sick is really a PSA for DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks to those who came with helpful advice. I appreciate it.
I sent the teacher an email asking to talk. We talked the very next day and she explained to me that DC sits on a different table where all the allergic kids sit and they monitor them very very close.
She assured me DC did not eat anything besides whatever was in the lunch box and suggested it could be crumbs that were on the table. She said they will take extra care to wipe the table properly and avoid cross contamination.
Besides all the snark I hope this thread can be used as some sort of PSA to educate those who are not familiar with the seriousness of food intolerance.
Again, thanks to those who tried to help.
Perhaps this could also be a good learning experience for you to not immediate accuse teachers of feeding her something with the allergen in it. Accusations of harming your child are really not good for building collaborative relationships. I hope you apologized to them for that.
I agree. This thread was the absolute opposite of a PSA for me. Blaming the teachers is really over the top. And of course the real cause is still a mystery, several weeks later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks to those who came with helpful advice. I appreciate it.
I sent the teacher an email asking to talk. We talked the very next day and she explained to me that DC sits on a different table where all the allergic kids sit and they monitor them very very close.
She assured me DC did not eat anything besides whatever was in the lunch box and suggested it could be crumbs that were on the table. She said they will take extra care to wipe the table properly and avoid cross contamination.
Besides all the snark I hope this thread can be used as some sort of PSA to educate those who are not familiar with the seriousness of food intolerance.
Again, thanks to those who tried to help.
Perhaps this could also be a good learning experience for you to not immediate accuse teachers of feeding her something with the allergen in it. Accusations of harming your child are really not good for building collaborative relationships. I hope you apologized to them for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks to those who came with helpful advice. I appreciate it.
I sent the teacher an email asking to talk. We talked the very next day and she explained to me that DC sits on a different table where all the allergic kids sit and they monitor them very very close.
She assured me DC did not eat anything besides whatever was in the lunch box and suggested it could be crumbs that were on the table. She said they will take extra care to wipe the table properly and avoid cross contamination.
Besides all the snark I hope this thread can be used as some sort of PSA to educate those who are not familiar with the seriousness of food intolerance.
Again, thanks to those who tried to help.
Perhaps this could also be a good learning experience for you to not immediate accuse teachers of feeding her something with the allergen in it. Accusations of harming your child are really not good for building collaborative relationships. I hope you apologized to them for that.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks to those who came with helpful advice. I appreciate it.
I sent the teacher an email asking to talk. We talked the very next day and she explained to me that DC sits on a different table where all the allergic kids sit and they monitor them very very close.
She assured me DC did not eat anything besides whatever was in the lunch box and suggested it could be crumbs that were on the table. She said they will take extra care to wipe the table properly and avoid cross contamination.
Besides all the snark I hope this thread can be used as some sort of PSA to educate those who are not familiar with the seriousness of food intolerance.
Again, thanks to those who tried to help.
\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD started pre-school a few weeks ago and I have those "gluten free" and "diary free" stickers all over her lunch box and lunch containers.
She's only 2.5yo so she doesn't know yet what she's allowed to eat and what hurts her. The school knows about her sensitivity and they're also a nut free school. Yesterday she came home from school with very little appetite, saying her tummy hurt and very very irritable. I thought she was tired and put her to sleep. She woke up from her nap with a massive diarrhea in her underwear and pooped numerous times since yesterday (yellow diarrhea like) when her normal is one huge poop at breakfast and one little one when she wakes up from her nap.
I'm sure they fed her something with either milk or gluten in it. How do I approach them? The only time she was away from me was in school so I know she didn't eat anything from her "no" list while under my watch. What do I even say to them?
![]()
You can outgrow gluten sensitivity, and it comes in waves, too. So stop worrying. My friend's daughter had it for ONE year before testing proved she was in the clear.
Rather than place blame upon these teachers, talk to them. You know there IS a stomach bug going around. Four colleagues have it. So it may be coincidental.
Really? Do you have a source for outgrowing it? In order to test for it there has to be gluten in the system. If her daughter hadn't been eating it, of course she'd be "clear" when re tested. That doesn't mean she outgrew it.
Would you like my friend's daughter's medical records with the gluten test results?
You're a fucking moron.
Gastroenteritis
ulcerative colitis
Wait a sec.
Does your dd have Celiac, or does she have Ulcerative Colitis.
Those are two completely different beasts.
No, the PP you quoted is talking about her friend's child. She never said anything about Celiac.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Thanks to those who came with helpful advice. I appreciate it.
I sent the teacher an email asking to talk. We talked the very next day and she explained to me that DC sits on a different table where all the allergic kids sit and they monitor them very very close.
She assured me DC did not eat anything besides whatever was in the lunch box and suggested it could be crumbs that were on the table. She said they will take extra care to wipe the table properly and avoid cross contamination.
Besides all the snark I hope this thread can be used as some sort of PSA to educate those who are not familiar with the seriousness of food intolerance.
Again, thanks to those who tried to help.
Anonymous wrote:
You can outgrow gluten sensitivity, and it comes in waves, too. So stop worrying. My friend's daughter had it for ONE year before testing proved she was in the clear.
Rather than place blame upon these teachers, talk to them. You know there IS a stomach bug going around. Four colleagues have it. So it may be coincidental.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD started pre-school a few weeks ago and I have those "gluten free" and "diary free" stickers all over her lunch box and lunch containers.
She's only 2.5yo so she doesn't know yet what she's allowed to eat and what hurts her. The school knows about her sensitivity and they're also a nut free school. Yesterday she came home from school with very little appetite, saying her tummy hurt and very very irritable. I thought she was tired and put her to sleep. She woke up from her nap with a massive diarrhea in her underwear and pooped numerous times since yesterday (yellow diarrhea like) when her normal is one huge poop at breakfast and one little one when she wakes up from her nap.
I'm sure they fed her something with either milk or gluten in it. How do I approach them? The only time she was away from me was in school so I know she didn't eat anything from her "no" list while under my watch. What do I even say to them?
![]()
You can outgrow gluten sensitivity, and it comes in waves, too. So stop worrying. My friend's daughter had it for ONE year before testing proved she was in the clear.
Rather than place blame upon these teachers, talk to them. You know there IS a stomach bug going around. Four colleagues have it. So it may be coincidental.
Really? Do you have a source for outgrowing it? In order to test for it there has to be gluten in the system. If her daughter hadn't been eating it, of course she'd be "clear" when re tested. That doesn't mean she outgrew it.
Would you like my friend's daughter's medical records with the gluten test results?
You're a fucking moron.
Gastroenteritis
ulcerative colitis
Wait a sec.
Does your dd have Celiac, or does she have Ulcerative Colitis.
Those are two completely different beasts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD started pre-school a few weeks ago and I have those "gluten free" and "diary free" stickers all over her lunch box and lunch containers.
She's only 2.5yo so she doesn't know yet what she's allowed to eat and what hurts her. The school knows about her sensitivity and they're also a nut free school. Yesterday she came home from school with very little appetite, saying her tummy hurt and very very irritable. I thought she was tired and put her to sleep. She woke up from her nap with a massive diarrhea in her underwear and pooped numerous times since yesterday (yellow diarrhea like) when her normal is one huge poop at breakfast and one little one when she wakes up from her nap.
I'm sure they fed her something with either milk or gluten in it. How do I approach them? The only time she was away from me was in school so I know she didn't eat anything from her "no" list while under my watch. What do I even say to them?
![]()
You can outgrow gluten sensitivity, and it comes in waves, too. So stop worrying. My friend's daughter had it for ONE year before testing proved she was in the clear.
Rather than place blame upon these teachers, talk to them. You know there IS a stomach bug going around. Four colleagues have it. So it may be coincidental.
Really? Do you have a source for outgrowing it? In order to test for it there has to be gluten in the system. If her daughter hadn't been eating it, of course she'd be "clear" when re tested. That doesn't mean she outgrew it.
Would you like my friend's daughter's medical records with the gluten test results?
You're a fucking moron.
Gastroenteritis
ulcerative colitis