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Thread: Have Americans Gone Nuts Over Nut Allergies?

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    Have Americans Gone Nuts Over Nut Allergies?


    Five years ago, at a San Francisco elementary school, a nurse stood by to ensure that children scrubbed their hands as they arrived, while all of their packed lunches were confiscated and searched for nut products. The measures were a precaution to protect a five-year-old boy in the class who had a severe nut allergy.

    In 2006, a town in Connecticut felled three hickory trees more than 60 feet high after a resident learned that the trees leaning over her property produced nuts, and complained that they posed a threat to her grandson who had nut allergies.

    Recently, a Massachusetts school district evacuated a school bus full of 10-year-olds after a stray peanut was found on the bus floor.

    Do these safeguards seem a little, well, nuts? Harvard professor Dr. Nicholas Christakis thinks so. One of Christakis's children attends school in the district that ordered the bus evacuation, and the episode prompted the physician and social scientist — best known for his work on the social "contagiousness" of characteristics such as obesity and happiness — to write a commentary, published in the British Medical Journal, questioning whether these so-called precautions are snowballing into something more like a societal hysteria.

    Of the roughly 3.3 million Americans who have nut allergies, about 150 die from allergy-related causes each year, notes Christakis. Compare those figures to the 100 people who are killed yearly by lightning, 45,000 who die in car crashes, and 1,300 killed in gun accidents. As a society, Christakis says, our priorities have been seriously skewed, and it's largely a result of fear. "My interest is in understanding [the reaction to nut allergies] as a spread of anxiety," he says.

    Between 1997 and 2007, the number of children under 18 who suffered from food allergies jumped 17%, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Experts don't disagree that the incidence of food allergy has increased, but there isn't much consensus about why. Some researchers suggest that an overly hygienic lifestyle may hamper the body's ability to build up proper immunities; others believe the statistical rise is a combination of a real increase in allergies and an increase in the number of patients seeking diagnosis (i.e., getting allergy tests that turn up very low levels of reaction that might have otherwise gone undiscovered). "You have to distinguish between an epidemic of diagnoses and an epidemic of allergies," says Christakis.

    No one would disagree that children who suffer from life-threatening allergies need to be protected, but the growing trend of demonizing nuts only fuels anxiety, Christakis says. Instilling in the general public the idea that nuts are "a clear and present danger" does little beyond heightening panic. "There are kids with severe allergies and they need to be taken seriously," he says, "but the problem with a disproportionate response is that it feeds the epidemic.

    There's even some evidence to suggest that establishing nut-free zones or nut-free schools may be detrimental to children's health, and increases their risk of developing nut allergies. A study of 86,000 Jewish children living in the U.K. and in Israel, cited by Christakis in his article, revealed that those who had more exposure to peanuts earlier in life were less likely to become allergic later on. In the U.K., where peanuts are an infrequent part of the diet, nearly 2% of the children studied developed allergies; in Israel, where peanuts are a common part of diet from infancy onward, only 0.17% of children had a nut allergy.

    But Dr. Robert Wood, chief of the Pediatric Allergy and Immunology department at Johns Hopkins Children's Center, cautions against putting too much stock in such epidemiological studies. "The reality is that the vast majority of kids — 95% plus — have no potential to get peanut allergies no matter what you do," he says, "and there's one-half to 1% who are going to get it no matter what you do." Although the findings of the U.K.-Israel study are intriguing, he says, they apply to a very small percentage of children, and more research needs to be done to determine the true impact of early nut exposure. (There is a study underway currently, says Wood, but the results won't be available for another three years.)

    Despite the occasional cases of nut over-precaution, Wood thinks the public generally approaches the allergy risk with common sense. "There are definitely situations where we see a fear of the allergy that develops far out of proportion to the true risk, but for the vast majority of schools, things are mostly on balance and in perspective," says Wood, who treats some 2,000 allergy patients. Further, he says, it's important to recognize that the appropriate protective measure depends on the age group in question. "We recommend very different approaches between an early preschooler and a late elementary schooler," he says. "We view preschool children as being at true risk — sharing food, having messy hands. There are many reactions that occur from those kinds of exposures," he says. "I think that having peanut-free preschools is a totally reasonable, justifiable thing to do." For older children, however, in the 4th or 5th grade, he says even minor precautions like specialized seating arrangements in the cafeteria are probably unnecessary.

    Still, on blogs run by moms of children with nut allergies, there is a consistent rallying cry for nut-free zones. The concern is airborne nut dust, which can be inhaled, or oily nut residues that can come into contact with children's skin. Wood, who has been allergic to nuts all his life, says these parents' worries may be exaggerated. The danger may depend on the severity of the allergy, but has much more to do with the degree of contact, he says. "Nut oils or the kinds of things that might be in a classroom — it's very rare for that exposure to cause anything more than a localized reaction," he says. "On the other hand, if you're a preschooler and your hands are in your mouth a lot, all bets are off."

    As for nut dust in the air, Wood says it can cause severe reactions — but only under specific circumstances, with high concentrations of nut dust in a confined space. At a baseball game, for example, where the dust is quickly dispersed through the air, the risk of an allergic reaction is low. But if you sat a long time in the small waiting room of a restaurant with a dish of nuts and servers who kept passing through, with plates of nuts, your risk of an allergic reaction would be higher, he says.

    But like Christakis, Wood cautions against excessive alarm. "It's an unfortunate situation," says Wood, "if a family with an inaccurate perception of the allergy leads a child to believe that a Snickers bar from 50 feet away is a lethal weapon."
    http://www.time.com/time/health/arti...869095,00.html

    The Peanut Butter Sandwich Under Threat


    When Principal Deborah Bevan started school this past September at Craneville Elementary in Dalton, Mass., there was a peculiar topic of conversation circulating in the teachers lounge: Peanut butter. Or, more specifically, how to get rid of it.
    Like hundreds of other school districts across the country, Craneville Elementary is facing a student body that is more allergic to peanuts than ever before. "I have never seen anything like this," says Bevan, a 25-year teaching veteran whose 489-student elementary school includes seven with peanut allergies this year. "These allergies came out of nowhere." To protect vulnerable students, Craneville and many other schools are being forced to establish what educators are calling "peanut-free zones" — areas in the cafeteria and throughout the school where nut products are banned; some schools are going nut-free altogether. In some districts, like Ladue in St. Louis, Mo. — which includes about half a dozen peanut-free schools — teachers must learn how to administer an adrenaline shot known as an EpiPen. The injection counteracts anaphylactic shock, a potentially deadly allergic reaction that results in closed airways and can be triggered by mere contact with a nut-based product.

    According to the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network, peanut allergies more than doubled between 1997 and 2002 in children under 5 and are now estimated to affect more than 1% of school age children. "It is like being in a minefield," says Dr. Scott Sicherer, an associate professor of pediatrics, allergy and immunology at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City. Researchers don't yet know why these allergies are blooming, but some experts think premature exposure to nut-based products in infancy may be to blame. Others believe the link is genetic. Still others cite the hygiene hypothesis — the idea that more and more parents are oversanitizing their kids with antibacterial agents, causing their immune systems to become more susceptible to allergies.

    Whatever the cause, some parents — of nonallergic children — grouse that it's unfair of the school to deprive healthy children of their favorite peanuty snacks. "Parents get very passionate and angry when their kids can�t bring peanut butter to school," says Mike Tringale, director of external affairs at the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America. "But you wouldn�t throw razor blades all over the gymnasium. For these allergic kids, putting peanut butter in the cafeteria is the same thing."

    For Craneville's Bevan, dealing with angry parents is the easy part. Trying to keep the kids safe, however, is daunting. "We are doing the best we can," Bevan says. "But it isn't easy. Peanuts are everywhere."
    http://www.time.com/time/health/arti...680316,00.html

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    Super Bowl XLV Champions! MichaelJCheaney's Avatar
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    So how long until we start putting kids in plastic bubbles and making them wear respirators? I mean really, it really doesn't seem like the parents want to take the time to really discover for themselves what it is that may trigger an allergic reaction. They just listen to the doctor who says "No nuts for you, your allergic" And then the parents get all stupid and hysterical and suddenly EVERYONE has to stop eating nuts

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    Grand Knight joo's Avatar
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    Is it wrong that I laughed every time I came across a "nut" pun in the above-linked articles? Yes.

    That being said, my sister has a severe allergy to seafood. Touching a piece of shrimp will send her to the hospital. Somehow, she's managed to make it to 35 without being surrounded by seafood-free zones.
    Last edited by joo; January 5th, 2009 at 12:19 AM. Reason: above, below, whatever
    "Letting the parade pass from sight, he focuses on the empty road beyond, a pale curve vanishing into the woods where nothing moves and a street lamp flickers on and off until at last it flickers out and darkness sweeps in like a hand."~Mark Z. Danielewski, A Book that Contains a Rape Scene

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    not nuts

    Peanuts are not actually nuts, they are legumes, just like peas and lentils.

    Some people are just so paranoid that they lump everything together and freak out over anything that has the word "nut" in it.

    Just because some one is allergic to peanuts probably means that they would not be allergic to real nuts, and that most fears are unfounded in that case.

    On the same subject, all nut grow in trees, and peanuts grow underground.

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    Have Americans Gone Nuts Over Nut Allergies?

    Yes.

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    [QUOTE=RaVen Blackehart;119135]http://www.time.com/time/health/arti...869095,00.html

    The Peanut Butter Sandwich Under Threat


    The rise in cases makes you wonder if its related to pesticides or other chemicals used in production. I do not recall hearing of anyone being allergic to nuts until about 15 - 20 years ago. Any science majors out there with more info on this?

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    Quote Originally Posted by joo View Post
    Is it wrong that I laughed every time I came across a "nut" pun in the above-linked articles? Yes.

    That being said, my sister has a severe allergy to seafood. Touching a piece of shrimp will send her to the hospital. Somehow, she's managed to make it to 35 without being surrounded by seafood-free zones.
    Me too Joo, I can't even wash dishes or be in the same room as shellfish. I carry an eppy pen as i've been to the ER hooked to IV's too many times.

    So I can understand why people are so scared of it. The last time it happened to me I almost died. I was blue by the time I got to the hospital. And for it to happen to a child, even more scary.

    But I have managed to make it into my 40's without actually dying, but have come close!

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    Ream Me Up, Scotty swivel's Avatar
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    My wife sometimes seems allergic to nuts.

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    Quote Originally Posted by swivel View Post
    My wife sometimes seems allergic to nuts.
    It's probably just you Swivel........

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    Why We're Going Nuts Over Nut Allergies

    Susan Fradin has nightmares about Cheerios. Specifically, the Honey Nut variety. Her son Noah is allergic to peanuts and almonds, and her nighttime torment began during his first trip to sleepaway camp, when he was 9. Fradin, a former publicist in Los Angeles, worried that her son would eat cereal he shouldn't and go into anaphylactic shock. "I woke up in the middle of the night thinking, What if he eats Honey Nut Cheerios thinking they are regular Cheerios?" she says.

    Yes, Fradin is one of those incredibly anxious parents who would prefer that her son never so much as lay eyes on a Mr. Peanut logo ever again. Noah's allergist at UCLA, Dr. Gary Rachelefsky, who has treated him since babyhood, describes her as initially "one of the most fearful mothers I ever came into contact with." She's calmer these days, but her concerns are not unfounded. A few months before Noah went off to camp, she woke up one night to find him covered in hives, coughing and gasping, and she had to jam a syringe full of epinephrine into his thigh to help him breathe. "It was horrendous," says Fradin. (See 9 kid foods to avoid.)

    Noah is now 16 and a surprisingly well-adjusted member of what might be called the Allergy Generation. In addition to peanuts, he is allergic to lentils, beans, peas, tree nuts, sesame and shellfish. The Fradins and the 3 million other families in the U.S. with food-allergic children have to navigate not only the complexities of the grocery aisle but also the growing skepticism among those who wonder if the sudden rise in food allergies is due more to hysteria than to histamines. A waiter, for example, may not grasp the seriousness behind Noah's endless questions about the menu. "I just need to spend a little more time ordering and talk about how I could die," he says.

    As more and more schools set up peanut-free zones and as food manufacturers add warning labels that their products might contain particles of peanuts, soy or other allergens, the abundance of caution is starting to trigger a backlash. Given all the attention paid in recent years to food allergies, the number of people in the U.S. who die from them--15 to 20 a year--is relatively small. More people die each year from bee stings. "But we don't remove flowers from schools or playgrounds," Dr. Nicholas Christakis, a professor of medical sociology at Harvard Medical School, commented recently in the British Medical Journal. When asked about his editorial, which he wrote after his son's school bus had to be evacuated because someone spotted a peanut on board, he said, "We should be having a sober-minded, public-health debate, and instead the overresponse to food allergies is preposterous."

    Christakis notes that peanut and other food allergies are a real problem; it's the community reaction to them that is getting out of hand. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the percentage of U.S. children under 18 with a reported food allergy jumped 18% from 1997 to 2007, and the number of children hospitalized for food allergies has nearly quadrupled in recent years. So forget pet dander and pollen. "In this day and age, allergy in pediatrics is all about food, food, food," says Dr. Allen Lapey, a pediatrician at Massachusetts General Hospital. Each year, 30,000 people in the U.S. are rushed to the emergency room suffering from an allergic reaction to food. And while these allergies are rising among all major racial and ethnic groups, they are climbing fastest among Hispanic children, according to new data from the CDC.
    continued...long but interesting.

    http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...881985,00.html

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    Some researchers suggest that an overly hygienic lifestyle may hamper the body's ability to build up proper immunities; others believe the statistical rise is a combination of a real increase in allergies and an increase in the number of patients seeking diagnosis (i.e., getting allergy tests that turn up very low levels of reaction that might have otherwise gone undiscovered). "You have to distinguish between an epidemic of diagnoses and an epidemic of allergies,"
    Personally, I buy the "overly hygienic lifestyle" theory. Anything to avoid housework.
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    Okay, so I'm a troll. I have been majorly irked by the preponderance of food allergies in my children's classrooms and it didn't help to find out that some of these reported allergies weren't real. (A couple of moms decided that they were so controlling of their children's snacks that they had to invent an allergy to keep their children from being given "junk" like cupcakes.)

    At the heart of my frustration was the various demands that I provide snacks on a regularized basis for the class, which then had to conform to allergy restrictions and the school district's idea of health (no candy, no cookies, no fresh stuff like fruit and veggies because they could rot). Eventually, you give up trying to be original or providing variety and just send an endless supply of goldfish crackers, because there's just nothing else.

    But my son was in a preschool class (afternoon) that had no allergies and I thought, great! I can send some peanut butter and crackers. No! The previous class (morning) had an allergic child, so even this class had to behave as though they had a food allergy! It drives me wild that one person's allergy means everyone has that allergy. I can sympathize with the seriousness of it, but I have to put it out there that our children have rights, too.

    So, yes, I sympathize with these parents:

    http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/bes...iref=allsearch

    It sounds to me like they weren't consulted and had enough. As I see it, you either just get rid of all celebrations (because someone always wants to share candy or cookies) or send a list of acceptable items out to parents beforehand (explicit list, not some general thing that says "no peanuts"). In my kids' schools, kids may not share lunches, trade lunches, etc., because of the food allergy problem. Trading sandwiches used to be a childhood ritual. A way that neglected kids could get some nutrition. Now, that is lost and a child who shares can be suspended (for "assault with a deadly sandwich"?).
    Last edited by Tundratot; March 11th, 2011 at 05:15 PM.
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