Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People should start organizing “no food” events and sports and activities for kids. I think there are a lot more people who want that than some people may realize. Especially in areas with a larger percentage of immigrants because I guess it’s easier for us to see how insane it is here. It must be difficult to do things differently when you’re raised to think that kids need a processed snack every few minutes to survive.
Actually I think it’s a way for American parents to try to control their kids who have bad behavior. Give them a processed snack and they shut up for a few minutes. They never seem to realize that this is making their kids’ behavior even worse.
Man I hope this is a troll. Good news Jan, the party is food free. I mean who wants to eat. This whole thread is full of people with eating pathologies
Anonymous wrote:People should start organizing “no food” events and sports and activities for kids. I think there are a lot more people who want that than some people may realize. Especially in areas with a larger percentage of immigrants because I guess it’s easier for us to see how insane it is here. It must be difficult to do things differently when you’re raised to think that kids need a processed snack every few minutes to survive.
Actually I think it’s a way for American parents to try to control their kids who have bad behavior. Give them a processed snack and they shut up for a few minutes. They never seem to realize that this is making their kids’ behavior even worse.
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.
Anonymous wrote:There isn't a single scientific study proving the link between food allergies and eczema, for the record. They can be comorbidities but a causal relationship HAS NOT BEEN PROVEN.
So, the odds that OP's child has eczema caused by this long list of foods are pretty low.
Anonymous wrote: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.
I hope you are reading op, and I know you are here to complain about food at kid events, but I beg you to reread what you wrote. Think about it being somewhat objective and ask yourself, was all this coming from doctors that actually are into food sensitivities or from gastro and allergy specialists. All nuts? This all sounds like elimination and then saying it bothered him. Where is he eating sorbitol and preservatives to this degree? If you stay away from all of these, are flare-ups still happening? If yes, do you just add another food to the list of what he can't eat?
I am guessing you are desperate to figure out what is causing these flare-ups and have gone from specialist to specialist who somehow told you, well stay away from this and this. This is like when I was looking for answers and nobody figured out it was Lyme. I was put on prednisone, allergy meds, back pain meds, inhalers, given also eczema topical creme, it was never-ending.
All I wanted to say is that unless you are sure, really sure all these foods are causing these reactions, you should explore the options about how to overcome these allergies as they are not life-threatening right now.
Instead of limiting your kid's life in the worst way possible.
Anonymous wrote:People should start organizing “no food” events and sports and activities for kids. I think there are a lot more people who want that than some people may realize. Especially in areas with a larger percentage of immigrants because I guess it’s easier for us to see how insane it is here. It must be difficult to do things differently when you’re raised to think that kids need a processed snack every few minutes to survive.
Actually I think it’s a way for American parents to try to control their kids who have bad behavior. Give them a processed snack and they shut up for a few minutes. They never seem to realize that this is making their kids’ behavior even worse.
Anonymous wrote:We did food therapy for our son with Dr. Banks in Arnold, MD and he was no longer allergic to dairy or eggs. We did this from infancy-age 2. Highly recommend. Best to do it when really young but they work with all ages. Wasn't covered by insurance but so worth it and our son happily eats yogurt, ice cream, cow milk, boiled eggs etc. now.
https://www.annapollendocs.com/