Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP maybe you need a second opinion. My DD has bad food-triggered eczema and the allergist sAys the best thing we can do is a very intense cream + bathing regimen and encouraging all of the foods even the trigger foods. She says this is the best way DD can grow out of the allergies.
+100
I can't believe only one person has brought this up. Both of my kids have severe eczema, as do many family members. We have seen lots of doctors and our allergist has always said to eat normally and treat the eczema. Not eating the trigger foods makes it worse, their bodies need to get used to them and that's how they eventually outgrow them. OP, you need a second opinion and frankly the fact that you are depriving your kid of all of these foods when that's not the standard medical advice gives me major pause here.
Anonymous wrote:The baseball coach every season 'assigns' each parent to provide a snack after every event. It's a snack schedule. T-ball, transitional ball, etc. are all 1 hour events. Kids don't need a snack every week. It's a hassle for the parents. The kids don't need chips and they already have their water bottle. Gimme a break!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My youngest has severe eczema. We have met with several specialists and over the course of a year have identified what flares him up- wheat, dairy, eggs, corn, tomatoes, chocolate, nuts, preservatives, annatto, sorbitol, and some others. Basically anything that comes in a box or can triggers hives and then skin that looks like third degree burns on his neck, torso, legs, arms, back and cheeks. It’s absolutely miserable and takes weeks to clear up a flare. I travel with our own snacks but it’s so damn hard when every single kids event involves food that he cannot eat. He’s 5 and he understands that he can’t have that sort of stuff and we are praying that he outgrows his allergies, and I honestly don’t want to take away the joy of food for anyone else but I just want one kids event that doesn’t involve food. Swim team celebrates every meet with boxes of donuts. The meets themselves involve snacks that are candy bars and chips. Piano gives away lollipops and other candy as prizes. Baseball does ice cream after every game. Soccer does cookies. School does pizza parties and ice cream. Every play date involves chips, gummies, etc. I know it’s just bad eczema and nowhere near the stresses of anaphylactic allergies that other parents have to deal with, but it’s just tiring. Give me one school event or sports practice where everyone eats fruits and veggies to celebrate. Anyway, I know this is a first world problem and I wouldn’t dare bring this up anywhere but an anonymous forum so this is just a rant.
OP, I brought this up in “Why American Don’t Give a F About What They Eat” thread.
I can’t believe the amount of junk food our kids get from other people on daily basis.
This is purely an American thing. Nowhere else in the world kids are rewarded with do much junk. Americans believe their kids will die of starvation if they don’t eat for 3 hours. No other nation hauls around bags of goldfish crackers, chips, bars, etc everywhere they go.
Also, we have record obesity and diabetes rates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like an eating disorder to me. It's very fashionable to blame all sorts of things on gluten or wheat or dairy or eggs. But there is absolutely no scientific proof that they are the cause of anything. Doctors are just fobbing you off because they don't know.
I’m OP, it’s not an eating disorder, he can eat those foods. He will happily eat those foods. But in a matter of hours his skin turns horrid. We have worked with several allergists and two specialists in eczema. No one has been fobbing us off, they’ve actually been extremely helpful and sympathetic. For now all we can do is avoid the foods. He does great with meat, rice, coconut milk, most fresh fruit and veggies minus corn and tomato (corn in particular is tough), fish, shrimp, etc. Hes not starving by any means, but we have yet to find any treats that don’t cause an issue unless I bake them at home with alternative flours and other things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like an eating disorder to me. It's very fashionable to blame all sorts of things on gluten or wheat or dairy or eggs. But there is absolutely no scientific proof that they are the cause of anything. Doctors are just fobbing you off because they don't know.
I’m OP, it’s not an eating disorder, he can eat those foods. He will happily eat those foods. But in a matter of hours his skin turns horrid. We have worked with several allergists and two specialists in eczema. No one has been fobbing us off, they’ve actually been extremely helpful and sympathetic. For now all we can do is avoid the foods. He does great with meat, rice, coconut milk, most fresh fruit and veggies minus corn and tomato (corn in particular is tough), fish, shrimp, etc. Hes not starving by any means, but we have yet to find any treats that don’t cause an issue unless I bake them at home with alternative flours and other things.
Helpful and sympathetic, sure. Because you are paying them but they are not giving you any real advice. And all you are doing is making your kid neurotic about food. Maybe not now. But wait.
Huh? What other advice do you recommend? He eat the food that makes him break out in a full body rash? Get wet wrapped at the hospital (yep, we have done that)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP maybe you need a second opinion. My DD has bad food-triggered eczema and the allergist sAys the best thing we can do is a very intense cream + bathing regimen and encouraging all of the foods even the trigger foods. She says this is the best way DD can grow out of the allergies.
+100
I can't believe only one person has brought this up. Both of my kids have severe eczema, as do many family members. We have seen lots of doctors and our allergist has always said to eat normally and treat the eczema. Not eating the trigger foods makes it worse, their bodies need to get used to them and that's how they eventually outgrow them. OP, you need a second opinion and frankly the fact that you are depriving your kid of all of these foods when that's not the standard medical advice gives me major pause here.