Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, a lot of people on this board just do not care about others. Personally I would be happy to accommodate this request. No, the other person does not have an obligation to stop bringing the snack, but it's a fairly small thing one caretaker can do to make another a little less anxious. I don't think it's that big of a deal to ask.
it isnt about not caring, it is absolutely an ineffective way to reduce allergy exposure and gives allergy parents a false sense of control. nut free schools have more incidents compared to non-nut free schools because they rely on no nuts vs other mitigation techniques
Why can't it be both? It's easy enough to care for others and also help parents of young children learn to mitigate exposure. It's really not a big deal and the caretakers might get to know each other better.
nope sorry, your feel good feelings dont actually reduce risk. it makes parents and kids more comfortable and less diligent and thats where mistakes happen. Oh Carol I asked our baker about nuts for the cupcakes and they are nut free- not understanding that it has to be a nut free facility AND susie homemaker cupcakes were made in the same kitchen she made her kids PBJ that morning.
OP- if your son has a life threatening peanut allergy look into the allergy dogs that can sniff nuts, even trace amounts.
You have a nasty attitude. Must be lonely to move through the world thinking that no one should help you or even deserves to help you.
If you cared so much you would eliminate all nuts from your diet now. Never have any in your home and never pack any for your kids. Just assume you can always be near someone who may have a nut allergy. Why wait to be asked? Don't you care?
My kids do not have allergies but I don't bring nut snacks to the playground. My kids obviously go to a nut free school so this isn't really a big deal. I also ask about allergies before playdates. So I know you're trying to be snarky, but I really do care.
When your kids eat nuts they can always leave residue behind. Ban nuts in your house to be extra safe. So they don’t bring it anywhere, ever. Its a small sacrifice, if you care.
Anonymous wrote:If I was regularly attending a park at the same time as another child, I would not mind at all if their parent mentioned the allergy and I would be happy not to bring the snack.
In order to reduce the chance of developing an allergy, I was advised to regularly feed my child this peanut snack. It is not wrong of me to feed this to my child when we are out and about. I have an interest in preventing peanut allergy in my child. (I've actually only fed it to her once at a playground so I'm not doing it regularly - usually we don't need any snacks at the playground.)
So I don't agree that no one should have nut (legume) snacks out and about but I would be happy to accommodate any child where I was made aware of the allergy.
Anonymous wrote:DD is very allergic to one tree nut. A kid who comes approx daily to the playground we go to often has that nut in his snack. Both him and DD are under 3. Would it be unreasonable to ask the caregiver not to bring the nut?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, a lot of people on this board just do not care about others. Personally I would be happy to accommodate this request. No, the other person does not have an obligation to stop bringing the snack, but it's a fairly small thing one caretaker can do to make another a little less anxious. I don't think it's that big of a deal to ask.
it isnt about not caring, it is absolutely an ineffective way to reduce allergy exposure and gives allergy parents a false sense of control. nut free schools have more incidents compared to non-nut free schools because they rely on no nuts vs other mitigation techniques
Why can't it be both? It's easy enough to care for others and also help parents of young children learn to mitigate exposure. It's really not a big deal and the caretakers might get to know each other better.
nope sorry, your feel good feelings dont actually reduce risk. it makes parents and kids more comfortable and less diligent and thats where mistakes happen. Oh Carol I asked our baker about nuts for the cupcakes and they are nut free- not understanding that it has to be a nut free facility AND susie homemaker cupcakes were made in the same kitchen she made her kids PBJ that morning.
OP- if your son has a life threatening peanut allergy look into the allergy dogs that can sniff nuts, even trace amounts.
You have a nasty attitude. Must be lonely to move through the world thinking that no one should help you or even deserves to help you.
If you cared so much you would eliminate all nuts from your diet now. Never have any in your home and never pack any for your kids. Just assume you can always be near someone who may have a nut allergy. Why wait to be asked? Don't you care?
My kids do not have allergies but I don't bring nut snacks to the playground. My kids obviously go to a nut free school so this isn't really a big deal. I also ask about allergies before playdates. So I know you're trying to be snarky, but I really do care.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should mention it. As a mother, I’d want to know if someone we hung out with had an allergy like that - I’m a new mom so this is good to hear, otherwise I’d probably be the parent of the kid with a nut snack.
There's nothing wrong with nuts as a snack in public places or in any environment where they aren't specifically banned, like some daycares/schools. It's your job to provide your child with food, it's not your job to keep my kid safe. The only takeaway here is: make sure you never offer a kid food directly, ALWAYS ask the parent/caregiver first; and make sure your kid does not share snacks or offer snacks to other kid without checking with adults first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, a lot of people on this board just do not care about others. Personally I would be happy to accommodate this request. No, the other person does not have an obligation to stop bringing the snack, but it's a fairly small thing one caretaker can do to make another a little less anxious. I don't think it's that big of a deal to ask.
it isnt about not caring, it is absolutely an ineffective way to reduce allergy exposure and gives allergy parents a false sense of control. nut free schools have more incidents compared to non-nut free schools because they rely on no nuts vs other mitigation techniques
Why can't it be both? It's easy enough to care for others and also help parents of young children learn to mitigate exposure. It's really not a big deal and the caretakers might get to know each other better.
nope sorry, your feel good feelings dont actually reduce risk. it makes parents and kids more comfortable and less diligent and thats where mistakes happen. Oh Carol I asked our baker about nuts for the cupcakes and they are nut free- not understanding that it has to be a nut free facility AND susie homemaker cupcakes were made in the same kitchen she made her kids PBJ that morning.
OP- if your son has a life threatening peanut allergy look into the allergy dogs that can sniff nuts, even trace amounts.
You have a nasty attitude. Must be lonely to move through the world thinking that no one should help you or even deserves to help you.
I have an attitude about people who think their feelings trump peer-reviewed research. I have an attitude when you tell me I am wrong even though my kid has an allergy and this is what was directed to us by our allergist. Help is not truly help is this case. It isnt loading groceries or assisting with a girl scout party- it is life-threatening so if you dont have the expertise of a physician or the experience of being an allergy parent you should take some notes and stop trying to hoist your "help" onto people.
Good lord, get a grip. No one said you were wrong or try to usurp your allergists' directions or even force kids to try their "peanut free snacks."
You make it seem like we don't agree with allergy research. Maybe reframe your perspective to see that parents do want to prevent harm from allergy exposure. Do you also respond this way when people set out "nut free" and non-candy bowls at Halloween?
yet again you think you can prevent harm- you cannot and you are not listening to allergy experienced parents. it is similar to talking over minorities when they tell you what is wrong and your like no no no you are just bitter, this is a better way- we are helping seeeeeee.
non-candy treats are not food but still a risk. most allergy parents buy safe food for their kids on halloween and let them trick-or-treat and then donate the candy they get and give them parent-selected items.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, a lot of people on this board just do not care about others. Personally I would be happy to accommodate this request. No, the other person does not have an obligation to stop bringing the snack, but it's a fairly small thing one caretaker can do to make another a little less anxious. I don't think it's that big of a deal to ask.
it isnt about not caring, it is absolutely an ineffective way to reduce allergy exposure and gives allergy parents a false sense of control. nut free schools have more incidents compared to non-nut free schools because they rely on no nuts vs other mitigation techniques
Why can't it be both? It's easy enough to care for others and also help parents of young children learn to mitigate exposure. It's really not a big deal and the caretakers might get to know each other better.
nope sorry, your feel good feelings dont actually reduce risk. it makes parents and kids more comfortable and less diligent and thats where mistakes happen. Oh Carol I asked our baker about nuts for the cupcakes and they are nut free- not understanding that it has to be a nut free facility AND susie homemaker cupcakes were made in the same kitchen she made her kids PBJ that morning.
OP- if your son has a life threatening peanut allergy look into the allergy dogs that can sniff nuts, even trace amounts.
You have a nasty attitude. Must be lonely to move through the world thinking that no one should help you or even deserves to help you.
If you cared so much you would eliminate all nuts from your diet now. Never have any in your home and never pack any for your kids. Just assume you can always be near someone who may have a nut allergy. Why wait to be asked? Don't you care?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, a lot of people on this board just do not care about others. Personally I would be happy to accommodate this request. No, the other person does not have an obligation to stop bringing the snack, but it's a fairly small thing one caretaker can do to make another a little less anxious. I don't think it's that big of a deal to ask.
it isnt about not caring, it is absolutely an ineffective way to reduce allergy exposure and gives allergy parents a false sense of control. nut free schools have more incidents compared to non-nut free schools because they rely on no nuts vs other mitigation techniques
Why can't it be both? It's easy enough to care for others and also help parents of young children learn to mitigate exposure. It's really not a big deal and the caretakers might get to know each other better.
nope sorry, your feel good feelings dont actually reduce risk. it makes parents and kids more comfortable and less diligent and thats where mistakes happen. Oh Carol I asked our baker about nuts for the cupcakes and they are nut free- not understanding that it has to be a nut free facility AND susie homemaker cupcakes were made in the same kitchen she made her kids PBJ that morning.
OP- if your son has a life threatening peanut allergy look into the allergy dogs that can sniff nuts, even trace amounts.
I don't understand why we are assuming OP will be less diligent. Can't parents be vigilant and also try to eliminate a known risk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man, a lot of people on this board just do not care about others. Personally I would be happy to accommodate this request. No, the other person does not have an obligation to stop bringing the snack, but it's a fairly small thing one caretaker can do to make another a little less anxious. I don't think it's that big of a deal to ask.
it isnt about not caring, it is absolutely an ineffective way to reduce allergy exposure and gives allergy parents a false sense of control. nut free schools have more incidents compared to non-nut free schools because they rely on no nuts vs other mitigation techniques
Why can't it be both? It's easy enough to care for others and also help parents of young children learn to mitigate exposure. It's really not a big deal and the caretakers might get to know each other better.
nope sorry, your feel good feelings dont actually reduce risk. it makes parents and kids more comfortable and less diligent and thats where mistakes happen. Oh Carol I asked our baker about nuts for the cupcakes and they are nut free- not understanding that it has to be a nut free facility AND susie homemaker cupcakes were made in the same kitchen she made her kids PBJ that morning.
OP- if your son has a life threatening peanut allergy look into the allergy dogs that can sniff nuts, even trace amounts.
I don't understand why we are assuming OP will be less diligent. Can't parents be vigilant and also try to eliminate a known risk?
You can try but she is using a public playground and it is beyond norms/customs to ask another parent to stop bringing a certain snack. it doesnt make any sense and is illogical that only the snack she sees is a concern. this is 100% an example of people who dont understand risk- the same people worry about kidnapping but have a pool in their backyard.