ducklite said:They aren't going to tell those people their kids need to wait three hours to eat.
gigi1313 said:actually, yes, they have and they do
gigi1313 said:actually, yes, they have and they do, although i am not sure they are able to "enforce" it if a passenger refuses not to eat it, although our experience is that most people are kind and compassionate and will refrain when asked, given that a child's life is at stake (literally)... while they do not read the ingredients on every passenger's snacks, i have witnessed a swa flight attendant telling a passenger to close up his bag of mixed nuts and save them for after the flight... and when my friends flew they were told they could not consume their pbj sandwiches on the plane and told them they had to wait...
I am the first to admit that I do not totally understand the peanut allergies. I have been very fortunate that all 4 of my children can eat peanut products without issue. Thank God for that.
But would someone mind giving me more info on this issue. I do not remember this being an issue when I was in school or college. Is it something that we were not aware of or is it something that is newer?
I guess I struggle with the issue of regulating what everyone eats. A school near me tried to tell the students that they could not bring PB&J for school lunch due to one childs allergy. Now, this was a very poor school area and I am wondering what they expected these children to eat everyday. They did end up not having to do that this year, due to the child being in kindergarten, but I am wondering how they will handle it with him being in first grade.
I really do want to be more educated on this subject and I am not looking to be flamed or anything. Can anyone help me understand this?
NeedaVacation03 said:I guess I struggle with the issue of regulating what everyone eats. A school near me tried to tell the students that they could not bring PB&J for school lunch due to one childs allergy. Now, this was a very poor school area and I am wondering what they expected these children to eat everyday.
ducklite said:Not that I'm not empathetic to the allergic person (I am one myself) but I've got a REAL problem with someone being told they can't feed their kid on a flight without previous warning.
ducklite said:Not that I'm not empathetic to the allergic person (I am one myself) but I've got a REAL problem with someone being told they can't feed their kid on a flight without previous warning.
ducklite said:If a family with three kids age 6, 4, and 2 board a flight from Peoria at 10:00am, changing planes in Houston, with the connecting flight leaving at noon and isn't due to land until 3:00pm, it's simply not acceptable for kids to not be fed the PB&J lunch that the parents packed before leaving home, and given no alternative because they haven't been told this until onboard.
That means you've got kids who haven't eaten since probably 7:00am. Totally not acceptable. It's not their fault, the fault lies with the airline for not giving advanced warning.
ducklite said:The alternate should be either notifying every single passenger in advance so they can adequately plan, or putting the peanut allergic kid at one end of the airplane and asking passengers to rearrange as needed to situate the ones who wish to eat PB&J at the other end.
ducklite said:Frankly if a child is so nut allergic that they will have a reaction due to peanut butter (not unprocessed peanuts--those are far more likely to cause a reaction) or foods that *might* contain nuts, they probably shouldn't be taking mass transit, as there's no way to guarantee the guy sitting in the seat previously wasn't eating salted peanuts and wiping his hands all over the seat.
Anne
robinb said:I think that SWA and parents of allergic kids just do the best that they can. There will always be the exception to the rule as in your case of the family who bright PB&J's for lunch on the plane. I think most people will comply with the request to wait until the end of the flight. Of course, there will be those that don't and that is something that an allergic kid and their family will face as long as the allergy exists. That can happen on SWA or other airlines that no longer serve peanuts.
NeedaVacation03 said:I am the first to admit that I do not totally understand the peanut allergies. I have been very fortunate that all 4 of my children can eat peanut products without issue. Thank God for that.
But would someone mind giving me more info on this issue. I do not remember this being an issue when I was in school or college. Is it something that we were not aware of or is it something that is newer?
I guess I struggle with the issue of regulating what everyone eats. A school near me tried to tell the students that they could not bring PB&J for school lunch due to one childs allergy. Now, this was a very poor school area and I am wondering what they expected these children to eat everyday. They did end up not having to do that this year, due to the child being in kindergarten, but I am wondering how they will handle it with him being in first grade.
I really do want to be more educated on this subject and I am not looking to be flamed or anything. Can anyone help me understand this?
gigi1313 said:i agree... but swa (which is the airline i have the most experience with) will ASK, not tell, other passengers to refrain from eating/opening peanut products on a flight... and the previous warning thing... swa has recently added a disability column to their online flight booking system that has a spot for that... and prior to packing your lunch, you could call and ask if that flight has been earmarked "peanut free"
again, i agree... but the airline will go out of it's way to help the family keep the allergic passenger safe by offering the snacks that they have available to the hungry family (more than the usual 1 btw) including fruit/grain bars, pretzels, snack mix, etc... while it's not the best lunch, it's a great compromise... and they can still consume their packed lunch upon landing... and as i said before, they cannot force them not to eat it (they don't confiscate it) but they do ask...
in an airplane where the air is recycled, there is no "safe distance" to separate the nut eaters from the nut allergic... just like in the days of old how the "smoking section" never really kept the other passengers from breating second-hand smoke...
which is why we pre-board and wipe down the entire area that ds will come in contact with... typically foods that "might" contain peanuts and/or tree nuts are harmless unless ingested... it's the mass opening of 100+ bags of peanuts that release nut dust into the air that is the main problem on planes...
shelby2001 said:Well Ducklite I will answer that one for you, the child 28 rows in front is going to the bathroom to wash their hands after the PB&J sandwich and just happens to wipe their hands on the seats. My DD gets up touches the peanut butter that's on the seats not knowing it is there and now has a reaction and is not breathing within 1 minute, I administer the epi-pen and all is well for now and we are now landing the plane at the nearest airport. I don't have a problem with the kids being served their PB&J for lunch the parents just have to be aware and make sure their kids don't tough everything on their way to wash their hands, cthat is all that I am asking them to do, DD has to touch or indest, but as a parent I can tell you I would have alot of guilt if someones child died over a sandwich.