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Food
Allergies are Deadly
(HealthScout)
-- Most people associate allergies with little more than annoying
sniffles, sneezes and wheezes. But for sufferers of some food
allergies, reactions can be far more serious -- even fatal.
And, experts
say, the most frustrating aspect of the 150 to 200 food-allergy
deaths in the United States each year is that many of them could
have been prevented.
To focus attention
on the problem, the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network (FAAN)
is sponsoring Food Allergy Awareness Week, starting today.
While many
common food allergies are caused by shellfish and other fish,
as well as milk, soy, wheat and eggs, the most life-threatening
allergies are triggered by nuts, says FAAN founder Anne Munoz-Furlong.
"In every
study on food-allergy deaths we've looked at, peanuts and tree
nuts accounted for over 90 percent of allergic-reaction fatalities,"
she says.
Munoz-Furlong
says food-allergy sufferers face the greatest risks when they
eat out and aren't told truthfully whether nuts were used in the
preparation of their meal.
"In the research
we looked at, time and again allergy sufferers would ask about
the food they were about to eat and identified themselves as being
very allergic, but they were not given the right information,"
she says.
Some food-allergy
sufferers can have severe reactions to even trace amounts of peanuts,
Munoz-Furlong says.
In one case
in a food establishment, a boy who ordered an ice cream sundae
sent it back because he was allergic to the peanuts on it. The
kitchen simply picked off the peanuts, applied more whipped cream
and sent the sundae back to him. He subsequently had a severe
reaction, Munoz-Furlong says.
It's those
kinds of shortcuts and a lack of awareness that can cost people
their lives.
In another
case, Munoz-Furlong says, a woman at a wedding reception in upstate
New York asked the waiter whether there were peanuts in the cookies
he was serving. The waiter said no. But because the cookies had
been made with a spatula used to make another dish containing
peanuts, the woman had a severe reaction and died.
"If the waiter
or waitress had taken just a few more minutes, thought about the
question and answered it properly, that person might be here today,"
Munoz-Furlong says.
Don't take
the waiter's word
Allergy sufferers
also must be sure to clearly communicate their needs to food establishments.
"We did see
a trend with the majority of fatalities being among individuals
ages 10 to 19, and we believe it's because this group of people
is still learning how to eat out away from home," Munoz-Furlong
says.
"They are
spending a lot of time in the company of friends and grabbing
food here and there and are more susceptible to listening to other
people -- and that makes them more vulnerable."
Dr. Scott
Sicherer, with the Jaffe Food Allergy Institute at Mount Sinai
School of Medicine in New York City, says all food-allergy sufferers
who dine out, regardless of age, shouldn't blindly place their
trust in the waiter or waitress.
"It may not
be the waiter they need to talk to. It may be the chef or some
other staff member who has more to do with food preparation,"
he says.
Sicherer says
food-allergy sufferers also may want to rethink going to Asian
restaurants and ice cream parlors -- both of which use many nut
products -- because of the high number of reactions that occur
at such places.
"There may
be some places that simply should be off-limits to people with
allergies. But if they must go, the main thing we suggest is that
they have strong communication with the correct people at the
restaurant," Sicherer says.
Experts add
that all emergency response teams should be adequately prepared
to deal with someone suffering from a severe food reaction.
Some states
require that paramedics have the emergency allergy treatment epinephrine
with them at all times, but many other states don't, says Munoz-Furlong.
"In many states,
if you call 911, you'll just get the first wave of emergency medical
technicians and they probably don't carry epinephrine. In most
cases, they'll have to call for backup and usually by the time
a backup comes, it's too late."
"So it's very
important that all states allow all levels of emergency medics
to carry this life-saving medicine."
Reference
Source 101
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