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Mom Wants school' Oak Trees Cut Down for Kids With (nut) Allergies
abcnews. ^
| Nov 14, 2012 2:44pm
Posted on 11/15/2012 9:07:17 AM PST by dennisw
Donna Giustizia, a mother of two, says the oak trees near her teenagers school in Vaughan, Ontario, are a health hazard, and even though the school is nut-free, she says school administrators arent protecting their students.
A false sense of security is putting a sign on the door that says nut-free, and theres nuts all over the place, Giustizia told The Star.
Giustizia says the trees around St. Stephen Catholic Elementary School are a deadly threat for kids with anaphylactic food allergies allergies that cause shock.
She appeared before the Vaughan, Ontario, City Council last week to plead for the removal of the trees, saying : The acorns are not only presenting a risk to the tree-nut-allergic students, but it is also becoming a great cause of anxiety among all students with nut allergies. Giustizia also said, according to The Star, that acorns can also be used to bully and torment children.
Giustizia, who heads the schools allergy committee, says shes not suggesting the entire town become nut-free, but she worries that acorns on the school grounds could trigger an allergic attack.
Dr. Clifford Bassett, medical director of allergy and asthma care at New York University, says hes not familiar with any reports of children having an allergic reaction by playing with acorns off the ground.
Theres no relationship between acorns and peanuts, Bassett said. If people have food allergies, they need to work with an allergist on prevention, avoidance and preparedness. People with food allergies need to be careful and have a plan.
(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...
TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: allergy; nutcase
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To: dinoparty
However, as a parent of a child with a severe peanut allergy, I can assure you that it is real and that its frightening, so please no comments about natural selection or we all had allergies when we were kids and we turned out OK ... Those comments just show your ignorance.
Yes, these things are real. I think there's no question that it is getting worse and no one has a definitive explanation(s).
That said, we cannot accommodate every single severe allergy out there. I have a sister-in-law with numerou severe allergies. Perfume, cat dander, incense and tobacco odor being just several of them. They can land her in the hospital pretty easily. She basically has to live her life around her allergies.
People whose lives or healthy are threatened by such commonly occuring ordinary things may have to consider special measures, including home schooling, rather than make everyone else miss out on things like a pet cat, church incense or an oak tree in the playground.
41
posted on
11/15/2012 9:29:38 AM PST
by
Dr. Sivana
(There is no salvation in politics.)
To: Hot Tabasco
I was actually thinking about squirrels crossing over onto school property with nuts in their mouths would be shot.
42
posted on
11/15/2012 9:29:57 AM PST
by
stayathomemom
(Beware of kittens modifying your posts.)
To: dfwgator
They can’t help it if they like the way they’re made. Why can’t the Maples just be happy in their shade?
43
posted on
11/15/2012 9:30:05 AM PST
by
massgopguy
(I owe everything to George Bailey)
To: dennisw
Wonder if she had her husband “de-frocked”???
44
posted on
11/15/2012 9:30:12 AM PST
by
illiac
(If we don't change directions soon, we'll get where we're going)
To: dfwgator
They can’t help it if they like the way they’re made. Why can’t the Maples just be happy in their shade?
45
posted on
11/15/2012 9:30:21 AM PST
by
massgopguy
(I owe everything to George Bailey)
To: dennisw
I would think that a peanut allergy would not translate to a tree allergy.
I wonder where this allergy comes from. I don’t remember any of this when I was a child. None whatsoever.
To: Cold Heart
47
posted on
11/15/2012 9:30:50 AM PST
by
sockhead
(Socialism: trickle up poverty.)
To: dennisw
Is she related to Bloomberg?
48
posted on
11/15/2012 9:32:33 AM PST
by
duckman
(I'm part of the group pulling the wagon!)
To: stayathomemom
I was actually thinking about squirrels crossing over onto school property
If it involves crossing a road, they'll never make it......
49
posted on
11/15/2012 9:33:14 AM PST
by
Hot Tabasco
(Jab her with a harpoon.....)
To: Dr. Sivana
I don’t disagree with you. However, there are some minimal things that can be done as a courtesy to the allergic person, without much inconvenience to the others. It angers me when people object even to these.
To: buffaloguy
One theory that doctors have is that parents keep our homes too sterile and clean these days, thus reducing enemies for our immune systems to attack, so the immune systems of kids look for something else to attack, such as peanut proteins.
To: buffaloguy
I would think that a peanut allergy would not translate to a tree allergy.Glenn Beck discussed this briefly and the peanut allergic kids would have to eat acorns to (possibly) be affected. What kid is going to eat acorns which are very astringent, taste awful?
52
posted on
11/15/2012 9:37:59 AM PST
by
dennisw
( The first principle is to find out who you are then you can achieve anything -- Buddhist monk)
To: dinoparty
I dont disagree with you. However, there are some minimal things that can be done as a courtesy to the allergic person, without much inconvenience to the others. It angers me when people object even to these.
Agreed. It really wasn't that big a deal for the airlines to move move from crappy peanuts to equally crappy pretzels. (I am hoping that no one with a super severe wheat allergy doesn't have a problem.) I'd rather it happen outside of the legal process.
53
posted on
11/15/2012 9:38:48 AM PST
by
Dr. Sivana
(There is no salvation in politics.)
To: dinoparty
I think that’s a HUGE part of it.....the immune system is like a muscle, use it or lose it.
54
posted on
11/15/2012 9:40:25 AM PST
by
dfwgator
To: buffaloguy
I would think that a peanut allergy would not translate to a tree allergy. I was wondering the same thing, but looked it up and found this "Peanuts are a member of a plant family called legumes, which includes peas and beans. (Curiously, although people with peanut allergies are at greater-than-normal risk of tree nut allergy, and for this reason many people with peanut allergies are advised to avoid tree nuts as a precaution, peanuts are not closely related to true nuts botanically.)"
I wonder if the fact that you have one allergy makes you more likely to have other allergies.
I was raised on a farm in the midwest in the 50's and simply noone had allergies. I developed some allergies once I left the farm.
55
posted on
11/15/2012 9:43:53 AM PST
by
w1andsodidwe
(Barrak has now won the contest. He is even worse than Jimmah.)
To: dinoparty
However, there are some minimal things that can be done as a courtesy to the allergic person, without much inconvenience to the others. It angers me when people object even to these.
In the same vein, people with really severe allergies also have to understand that even intelligent people don't always no what things like "no sugar" and "no dairy" mean. In the case of the former, I don't know how many don't realize that ketchup is loaded with sugar, and most of those thigs with an "-ose" on the end are forms of sugar. In the case of the latter, my brother-in-law, as an infant was given butter in a Canadian HOSPITAL even AFTER being told he couldn't have dairy. The nurse assumed that he was lactose intolerant. In fact, he couldn't deal with dairy proteins and almost died (butter being a concentrated form and all). How a nurse could make such a stupid assumption with almost no upside and so much downside is beyond me.
56
posted on
11/15/2012 9:44:43 AM PST
by
Dr. Sivana
(There is no salvation in politics.)
To: dennisw
Mom, tell your rug rats not to eat the nuts!!!
57
posted on
11/15/2012 9:45:04 AM PST
by
dalereed
To: dennisw
Prediction: in about 5 years the “peanut butter allergy crowd” will be the newest victim group.
To: w1andsodidwe
I was raised on a farm in the midwest in the 50's and simply noone had allergies. I developed some allergies once I left the farm.
I was allergic to baby chicks but built up an immunity through proximity.
59
posted on
11/15/2012 9:50:42 AM PST
by
cripplecreek
(REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
To: dennisw
I have a question for everyone. Does anyone know of an adult who suffers from a peanut allergy?
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