Mhays wrote:As a mom with a kid in school, the allergies are a real thing: there have been a couple of incidents in the past several years where an allergic kid had to be treated because some kindly friend offered him a snack with the allergen in it, fortunately the protocols for treating the kids have improved. There is an exponential increase in life-threatening allergies at our school from my son's grade (I think we have one) down to kindergarten (I think one of the earlier grades has five or six kids;) these aren't over-protective parents whose kids are over-diagnosed, these are kids who go to the hospital if exposed to the allergen. Some of these kids get contact dermatitis from touching a surface the allergen has been on.
I'm not claiming that food allergies don't exist
at all -- it's the apparent
increase in them that puzzles me. If we really have had a serious increase in food allergies (over prior generations) perhaps our medical profession should be devoting more time to researching the source. Is it the mother's diet during pregnancy? Is it what we feed our kids when they're young (ie, unvaried diets)? Because although I admit that I'm kind of a no-bullshit person when it comes to medical issues (I rarely see the doctor, prefer homeopathic remedies to prescriptions) and that in part comes from living with a parent who has had years of auto-immune diagnoses heaped upon her, the primary course of treatment for which are heavy, mind-numbing drugs, which only cause greater issues. So, I guess, I'm not willing to cede all to what I see as the medical profession's uncontrollable need to heap grave diagnoses on every little cough, ache, or red splotch on our bodies. I also don't accept that we are on the fast-train to a peanut-free society -- just yet. FWIW, Europeans (as well as other cultures) generally scoff at these newfangled American food allergies, and they seem to be doing just fine. Having said that, I understand and accept that there are those who smell a peanut and need to be rushed to the hospital, just as there are those who can die if stung by a bee. But my unscientific hunch is that these people are fewer and farther in between that it would seem.
I realize I'm veering off-course a tad here -- and as Hammond says, it's a touchy subject -- but if the ban on cupcakes is at least somewhat allergy-driven, I'd really like to know why we at least seem to be experiencing such an increase in kids with food allergies.
P.S. I often get dermatitis (not life-threatening) from drinking red wine. But as anyone who knows me will tell you, that sure as heck don't stop me.