Approximately
1-2% of Australians have a food allergy, including 1 in 10 children, and some
of them will experience a life-threatening allergic reaction (anaphylaxis). About 10 people die each year in Australia from an anaphylactic reaction. Some will grow out of their food allergy, but
those with peanut and tree nut allergy will most likely have it for life. My eight year old son had his first
anaphylactic reaction to peanuts when he was 13 months old, and it has affected
what our family eats ever since.
Australia has
the highest prevalence of food allergy in the world, and while it is
devastating when you or your child are first diagnosed, living with a food
allergy is manageable if we have an allergy aware community.
This week is
Food Allergy Awareness Week, which aims to promote and develop the awareness of
food allergy amongst Australians through education, research and ongoing
support.
If you or
your child has a food allergy, or you want to support someone who has a food
allergy, there are lots of resources available.
I’ve put together a selection of
my favourites:
A charity For resources and educational material and support
One of the first things we did when our son was diagnosed
was to join Anaphylaxis Australia, and the information and support they provide
has been invaluable.
For Anaphylaxis e-training, resources for health professsionals and patients, patient support groups, fact sheets
Coming later
this year is the GS1 GoScan - an app for your smartphone that will make it so
much easier to safely buy food. Using
your iPhone or iPad (still waiting for news of an Android app), you scan or
type the barcode of a product; which is then checked against a database of all
products, provided by the manufacturers.
You are then presented with a Categories Screen where you can choose
what information you need on that product – Allergens, Ingredients, Nutrition
and more. You can even set up GoScan to
alert you when a product contains peanuts, or a particular allergen – an alert message
would be displayed if a product containing that allergen is scanned.
Be a MATE - Making Allergy Treatment Easier - support those with food allergies
Wow that app sounds amazing - so helpful!
ReplyDeleteMy daughter happily brought home some allergy tattoos yesterday and was telling me all about allergy awareness.
I hope this app will be of great help. Thanks for the share.
ReplyDelete