Allerenergy bars are free of the top 8 allergens and
have 3g of protein in each.
http://www.allerenergy.com/
--- Beth Kevles <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Hi, Friends --
>
> A question came up at my son's summer camp yesterday
> which I need to
> deal with tomorrow (Wednesday). Although the
> allergen in question is
> peanuts, I think the policy would apply regardless
> of allergen,
> provided the reaction is severe. I'd appreciate
> hearing your thoughts.
>
> One child in my son's group (6-12 year olds, I
> think) has a severe
> peanut allergy. We've been duly asked to not bring
> in peanut products.
>
> I sent in a Luna bar for my son's afternoon snack.
> The bar contains no
> peanuts in the ingredient list, but at the bottom of
> the list it says
> it may contain traces of peanuts (among other
> things). Clearly a
> potential cross-contamination issue. In consequence
> of this, my son
> was made to sit in isolation while he ate his snack
> and then to wash
> his hands and face with soap before rejoining the
> group. (He couldn't
> sit with a non-allergic child because none of the
> kids are allowed to
> know who the allergic child is.)
>
> My questions:
>
> If your child has a severe allergy, is it okay to
> sit near a child
> who's eating something like a Luna bar with its
> cross-contamination
> risk? Does that provide an unacceptable risk to
> your severely allergic
> child? Or do other foods also contain an
> (unlabelled) similar risk?
> (I'm thinking of products that don't yet have the
> allergen listing on
> the package, foods removed from their packaging, or
> foods made at home
> that get cross-contaminated, ie from a siblings'
> pb&j sandwich)?
>
> Is it reasonable to isolate a child who's eating the
> risky food? Is
> that worth the preservation of the allergic child's
> privacy?
>
> If your child has a severe allergy like this, how
> valuable is it to you
> and your child to keep the allergy secret?
>
> FInally, if I have to abide by the camp policy (and
> I will if it makes
> medical sense), can any recommend an afternoon snack
> with the following
> properties:
>
> Allergnically free of milk protein, red dye #40,
> shellfish and, of
> course, peanuts!
> Non-perishable (since the ice-pack will have lost
> its cool by then).
> Contains protein.
> Is plausibly attractive to an 8-year old boy.
>
> Thanks for your thoughts!
> --Beth Kevles
> Eating without Casein website
> http://web.mit.edu/kevles/www/nomilk.html
>
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