J. Louise Larson

Allergies and the Fine Print: Check Those Labels



Posted: Saturday, February 02, 2008

by
http://familyrootsandwings.blogspot.com/

For parents of kids with allergies, labels get confusing.

Two cans of chicken broth, same brand, side by side on the shelf. One is 99 percent fat free, one is 100 percent fat free. In this case, you'd have to read the label to know that the one that is 99 percent fat free contains soy. The parent of a child allergic to soy would want to read both.

Lists of ingredients are perhaps the most boring reading material in the world, but for the parents of children with food allergies, it's required reading – and lifesaving. It got less confusing with federal laws passed this year that demand food manufacturers called a spade a spade – and a peanut a peanut.

However, there is misunderstanding about recent federal laws ordering changes to food labeling, says Donna Zinke Cowman, the founder of FAST of Texas. "All that did was make people use the real, live word – they have to say milk and eggs instead of (food industry terms) … What people don't understand is that they see some of those warnings on prepackaged foods and they think it's required by law but it's not. People think if it doesn't have that warning that it's safe, but that may not be the case. Warnings are not required, they're voluntary," she says. Some companies like Nabisco and Hershey do use the warnings, she says. "If it's a brand I don't know, I call and ask. That's what parents are still in a position to do, because those shared equipment/cross contamination warnings are not required by law."

Fort Worth allergist Dr. Susan Bailey says in some ways labeling is getting clearer and more specific. "For peanut allergies, the awareness of this is so much better than it was 10 years ago. Most companies realize they're going to be liable if someone has a reaction to something that's in their food but not on the label," she says.

General Guidelines for labels and products:

Mom Marnie Freeman has become an expert at sussing out troublesome ingredients that might send her daughter into a fatal anaphylactic reaction.
"Every label gets read," she says.

Test your allergy IQ here:
http://raisingthinkers.blogspot.com/2008/02/test-your-allergy-iq.html

For more articles by J. Louise Larson on kids and allergies, see these links:
http://raisingthinkers.blogspot.com/2008/02/allergy-safe-at-school-be-prepared.html

- J. Louise Larson http://raisingthinkers.blogspot.com/

J. Louise Larson is the managing editor of The Ennis Journal in Ennis, Texas. She is a Texas-based writer and speaker whose work has been published in magazines and newspapers, including Entrepreneur Magazine, AirTran's Go Magazine, Smart Business Magazine, Midwest Airlines' MyMidwest Magazine, DS News, the Dallas Morning News and others. Her work has been featured on thestreet.com, msnbc.com, entrepreneur.com, business.com and other sites. Her family blog can be seen at http://familyrootsandwings.blogspot.com/ and her writing blog at http://writingporch.blogspot.com/. She is the author of The FabJob Guide to Become A Party Planner (FabJob Publishing 2006) and a member of The Author's Guild and the Writers League of Texas.

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