Peanut Allergies Increasing in Children

Kids need taught to be aware of what's safe for them to eat

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By Heather Hintze
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ANCHORAGE - Lessons about good nutrition start at home. For some families it’s not about teaching kids what to eat but rather what not to eat.

“He was in the summer program and the whole classroom was served peanut butter sandwiches. Kai accidentally touched something, touched his face and he got hives,” said Kari Hebert.

Her son Kai is not only allergic to peanuts but milk and eggs as well. He’s part of a growing number of kids diagnosed with a peanut allergy. Studies show the number has tripled over the past ten years.

Kai is in second grade at Denali Montessori. Walking down the hallways it’s easy to spot the classrooms that have kids like Kai because they have “No Peanut Zone,” or “Peanut Sensitive Area” signs on the doors.

Teachers say they have a few students with peanut allergies every year and it’s usually not a big deal.

“Those kids who have those allergies are very aware of it and their parents know. Sometimes they'll be reading the labels just so see if there's peanuts,” said Kai’s teacher Keith Harjehausen.

Simon Mitchell is also a second grader with a peanut allergy. He wears a medical alert bracelet just in case he comes into contact with something he shouldn’t.

“It’s got my name and birthday. I don't just have a peanut allergy I have more allergies and then it has my mom and dad's phone number,” said Mitchell.

Parents say they teach their kids not to eat anything that doesn’t come from their own home because even though someone else’s sandwich looks good, it may not be good for them.

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Sam K said on Saturday, Sep 22 at 3:37 PM

Kids need taught???????? Good Lord, where is the editor?

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Kevin S said on Sunday, Sep 23 at 2:10 PM

I agree the allergic child needs to learn to deal with his allergy. Other children need to be taught about food allergies and sufferers of them. Schools shouldn't have allergy free classrooms. The kids should use proper hygiene in light of the sufferers, but not ban nutritious food from the premises. If the child is so allergic that he cannot interact in a public school environment, he should not be in a public school.

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Rocky B said on Sunday, Sep 23 at 7:44 PM

I wonder how many of these kids became allergic after being immunized with flu vaccine. First thing they ask is are you allergic to peanuts, eggs, milk and if you aren't, you get a shot whether it works or not. Maybe those shots have an opposite affect on certain individuals. It's a thought.

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