NikitaZee
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2009
- Messages
- 2,533
I think it's extreme, and I wouldn't want to go through all that copying of ingredient labels, etc. I also send in baggies of pretzels, goldfish, etc. so I'd have to re-do my snack packing routine as well.
That said, one of my son's classmates had a reaction at school 2 years ago due to something my son had on his hands. My husband is friendly with the little girl's father, so when she was taken from school in an ambulance, the girl's father called around to try and piece together what happened. Turns out, my son was eating Hostess chocolate chip mini-muffins for breakfast at the time, and had nut-substance on his hands due to cross-contamination at the manufacturer (the banana nut muffins are made on the same machinery, and the label indicated this). The girl and my son had been holding hands on the playground, and that's what did it.
From then on, we had my son wash his hands after eating mini-muffins for breakfast. But, it just goes to show - you can't control everything in order to avoid these allergic reactions - this exposure was as a result of something my son ate at home, hours earlier.
It must be a terrible feeling to have a child with such severe allergies. I don't know what I'd do in that situation.
That said, one of my son's classmates had a reaction at school 2 years ago due to something my son had on his hands. My husband is friendly with the little girl's father, so when she was taken from school in an ambulance, the girl's father called around to try and piece together what happened. Turns out, my son was eating Hostess chocolate chip mini-muffins for breakfast at the time, and had nut-substance on his hands due to cross-contamination at the manufacturer (the banana nut muffins are made on the same machinery, and the label indicated this). The girl and my son had been holding hands on the playground, and that's what did it.
From then on, we had my son wash his hands after eating mini-muffins for breakfast. But, it just goes to show - you can't control everything in order to avoid these allergic reactions - this exposure was as a result of something my son ate at home, hours earlier.
It must be a terrible feeling to have a child with such severe allergies. I don't know what I'd do in that situation.
After reading so many labels you'd be surprised just how much food has garlic, almost kind of deli meat was off limits for sandwiches! Also so perfume or scented deoderate is allowed in the school because some kids have scent allergies
DD would starve, she is very picky and rarely eats school lunches.
