Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Peanut Allergies are a Parents' Imagination?!?!

Occasionally, I think its important to see the views of others on the issue of peanut allergy. As hard as it is to read sometimes, we need to be educated on how others view our child's peanut allergy.

Be prepared. This will probably make you angry.

What shocks me about the following article is the fact that the LA Times published it. I always assumed this was a good paper. But columnists are entitled to their own opinions. The author, Joel Stein, falls under a freedom we all enjoy: freedom of speech.

When you read this article, instead of getting upset, try to remember how fortunate this person is that they don't have to know our reality. If he has kids, they obviously don't have a peanut allergy. It sounds like his extended family has been spared, as well. He simply has no idea...

Some kids really do have food allergies. But most just have bad reactions to their parents' mass hysteria.
Joel Stein
January 9, 2009

Your kid doesn't have an allergy to nuts. Your kid has a parent who needs to feel special. Your kid also spends recess running and screaming, "No! Stop! Don't rub my head with peanut butter!"

Yes, a tiny number of kids have severe peanut allergies that cause anaphylactic shock, and all their teachers should be warned, handed EpiPens and given a really expensive gift at Christmas. But unless you're a character on "Heroes," genes don't mutate fast enough to have caused an 18% increase in childhood food allergies between 1997 and 2007. And genes certainly don't cause 25% of parents to believe that their kids have food allergies, when 4% do. Yuppiedom does.

I first had this thought seven years ago, when I wrote a short story that very few people read because, unlike most people, I was kind enough not to show it to anyone. In one pointless digression, I described a future allergy epidemic in which not only nuts but malt, guar gum, gluten and corn cause kids to blow up like balloons in Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade. It subsides only after the FDA declares the allergies entirely psychosomatic.

You can see why I didn't send that story to the New Yorker.

But an essay by Harvard doctor and social scientist Nicholas Christakis in the British Medical Journal -- which I read in between my perusal of Classical Philology and the IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics -- makes more or less the same argument. Christakis, who did a famous study showing that having fat friends makes you fat, wrote that parental responses "bear many of the hallmarks of mass psychogenic illness."

If you don't think allergic reactions can be caused by mass hysteria, then you don't know about the uncontrollable dancing that gripped thousands of Europeans between the 14th and 18th centuries, or that the South Korean government recently issued a consumer safety alert saying that electric fans can asphyxiate you if left running overnight, after news reports of several deaths. You, in short, have never looked up "mass hysteria" on Wikipedia.

Since food allergies kill about as many people as lightning strikes each year, we probably don't need to ban peanuts from schools or put warnings on every product saying it was "made in a factory that also has a break room where a guy named Dave often sneaks in a King Size Snickers despite this 'diet' he says he's on."

When I talked to Christakis, he made it clear that -- unlike me -- he doesn't think peanut allergies represent a mass hysteria. That's because scientists believe in rigorous study and proof, while opinion columnists believe in saying something outrageous to get attention.

But we did agree that it is strange how peanut allergies are only an issue in rich, lefty communities.

"We don't see this problem much in African American or poor communities. So there's something going on here. We don't see them in Ecuador and Guatemala," Christakis said.

A study of Jews of similar demographics and genetics in Britain and Israel found that British kids were 10 times more likely to have peanut allergies than Israelis. That's probably because Israeli kids have other things to be afraid of. I would like to see a study that measures one's increased likelihood of peanut allergies if you're an American kid named Oliver, Aidan, Spencer or Finn.

Parents may think they are doing their kids a favor by testing them and being hyper-vigilant about monitoring what they eat, but it's not cool to freak kids out. Only 20% of kids who get a positive allergy test result need treatment. And a 2003 study showed that kids who were told they were allergic to peanuts had more anxiety and felt more physically restricted than if they had diabetes. "It's anxiety-producing to imagine that having a snack in kindergarten could be deadly," Christakis said. Remember, this is a demographic so easily panicked that, equipped with only circles and dots, it invented an inoculation to cooties.

A few years ago, I was at a bar without food, so I started downing peanuts. Around the third bowl, I started coughing and felt this itchiness in the back of my throat, which I quickly treated with beer. Still, for a few minutes, I was convinced that a peanut allergy was about to kill me. If the beer had not made me forget the incident, I might have avoided nuts for the rest of my life. Or, worse, bored everyone at the table with my questions about nut allergies.

So bring back nuts to schools. If parents need to panic about a food, at least go with seafood allergies. Those fish sticks are disgusting.

jstein@latimescolumnists.com

All I can say is if this man had seen my son's reaction to his failed food challenge on June 30, 2008 this article would have never be written!

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Robyn, did you write to this guy? He's clueless!!!! K in NC

Anonymous said...

Wow! He is an idiot! It is true that people think that way, though. Sadly enough, people at my own workplace have the same feelings! My son almost died and they blew it off as my over-reacting. One person even told me that she thought the cure for PA was to rub all PA people down with peanut oil until their bodies become immune. Without hitting her, I calmly told her that they wouldn't be immune, they'd be dead! I has been challenging to explain and educate them, but they are understanding more and more as they are around my son.

Paula said...

He doesn't warrant a reply. There is no talking to people like that. The sad part is that, as we strive to educate others, people like Joel Stein is undoing our good work. People like him do and say what they like to get attention regardless of the dangerous message they are sending.

Anonymous said...

I stumbled on your blog a few months ago. I have a son who is 3 1/2 who also has peanut allergies. I never comment on blogs, only check in now and then. Of course, I had to comment on this. I was SHOCKED to read the article by Joel Stein. I did send him an email response, but I am sure that someone who can write such a judgemental, misguided, awful article will skip over any email not supporting his stance. Thanks for the blogging, and info on peanut allergies.
Teresa

Alexis said...

Robyn, thanks for sharing this. I think this guy needs to be inundated with emails and letters for his ignorance. Fearing for our children's lives is NOT a call for attention, for crying out loud! If he only understood the complexity and challenge this stupid allergy has added to all of our lives, well ... he wouldn't be so smug.

Anonymous said...

i have found a counter-argeument article for this column, please read-

http://www.foodallergy.org/media/HotTopics/latimes.html

BFG said...

http://barbfeick.com/vaccinations/

I read that 1 in 70 people in the UK are allergic to peanuts. 1 in 70! And that includes adults. Most of the peanut allergy is found in children. I decided to study to see if I could figure out why.

It began as a "wild idea" that vaccinations or medicine could be causing peanut allergy. It soon turned into a horrible realization. Vaccinations may be the leading cause of food allergies!

A very small amount of food proteins from many sources are considered inert ingredients that fall under trade secret protection and are not on the vaccine inserts. Various studies have shown that injecting an animal with protein is one method of inducing an allergy.

There was a study done on Indonesian and Thai children that has been frequently quoted as saying that there are no peanut allergies in Thailand or Singapore in spite of the high consumption of peanuts. Searching the Internet I found out that Singapore has a major problem with peanut allergy. The study itself says that many children reacted to peanuts in a skin prick test and that it eliminated a number of children from the study.

I found a very long list of food protein that can be used in vaccine production in various vaccine patents on-line.

The increased childhood vaccination schedule coincides with the increase in food allergies in industrialized nations. The lower incidence of food allergies in less industrialized nations also coincides with a lower vaccination rate. The lower incidence of food allergies in the Hispanic population of the United States also coincides with a lower vaccination rate.

The evidence of food allergy in animals has only been found in vaccinated animals.

Mainstream medicine has presented the "hygiene theory" to explain the huge increase in food allergies:

Anne Muñoz-Furlong, head of FAAN, says “Perhaps our homes are too clean — we’ve done too much to take away the job of the immune system. We don’t have parasites, a lot of the childhood diseases you vaccinate and don’t have, so maybe for some people, the immune system is looking for something to do and decides, ‘Aha, I don’t like milk’ or ‘I don’t like peanuts,’” and the body then attacks the food protein as if it were an enemy invader.”

So using common sense - which theory makes the most sense to you:

1. Vaccines cause food allergies
2. Cleanliness causes food allergies

ukreal1 said...

WOW, I would like to stick my epipen right where the sun doesn't shine on this little Joel brat. Coming from a non-yuppie Mum.

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Kirsten Hess said...

Honestly, I am crying. Although i have delat with my daughters allergies for years, and am proactively working with my community, school and government to make the state a more educated place, this articly has me in uncontrollable tears. Of late I have expereinced more depression as it relates to keeping my daughter safe, and reading this article hurts more than I can explain.

Robyn said...

Oh Kirsten, I am so sorry this upset you so much!! Keep doing what you are doing and, I think, gradually it will trickle out to people like this guy.

Depression and PA...I have tried to research how common it is. Not much out there on it. I know myself and other moms have with PA kids have had it. Connect with other moms locally or through an online forum (my Facebook group is one place) so that you know you are not alone.

Thanks for being so open about your feelings!!