Nut Allergies: The facts

Since 1998, pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers have been advised that if there is a history of allergy in the family – including eczema, asthma and hayfever – they should avoid peanuts. Weaning information has also changed, with “at risk” families being advised to delay the introduction of peanuts.

I doubt the advice would have helped Thomas. I was avoiding feeding him peanuts anyway.
I did, however, regularly eat peanut butter while pregnant and breastfeeding.

Doctors cannot predict what will happen if Thomas ever eats nuts in the future. Skin
tests showed a positive allergy to all nuts and a second attack is usually worse.

It is now two and a half years since he suffered anaphylactic shock, but the memory of
that teatime never fades. I know that only strict vigilance will protect him.

Where to next?

This entry was posted in Baby Health. Bookmark the permalink.