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The Many Benefits Of Allergy Free Foods
Written by Chris Channing   
Saturday, 22 May 2010 07:44
If you have a food allergy, you know that it is essential to avoid the allergen that you have a reaction to. You also know how quickly adverse reactions can occur, and how serious they may become. No matter how careful you are, allergens can be found in products where you least expect them. One of the benefits of allergy free foods is knowing precisely what you are getting in the products you eat.
by ChrisChanning


If you have a food allergy, you know that it is essential to avoid the allergen that you have a reaction to. You also know how quickly adverse reactions can occur, and how serious they may become. No matter how careful you are, allergens can be found in products where you least expect them. One of the benefits of allergy free foods is knowing precisely what you are getting in the products you eat.

Estimates are that around 2 percent of adults and from 4 to 8 percent of babies and children are sensitive to one or more food allergens. In recent years it seems that these numbers are increasing for young people. Visits to emergency rooms for severe food allergic reactions number around 30,000 each year for Americans. From these figures, it seems obvious that the more closely one can control the quality of one's food with regards to allergens, the better.

It often takes only a few minutes, and almost always less than an hour, for an adverse reaction to a food allergen to occur. The reaction may be minor, such as an itching of the mouth or on other parts of the body, or severe enough to cause death if not treated immediately, as in anaphylactic shock. There is no way to cure food allergies, though children, and sometimes adults, do outgrow them with time.

Approximately 90 percent of all food allergies are caused by eight foods. These are fish, shellfish, wheat, soy, egg, milk, tree nuts and peanuts. Obviously, one can fairly easily avoid some of them, such as shellfish or fish. Others, however, being included as ingredients in other products, are less obvious. Wheat, egg, milk and soy are used widely in many different products. Even foods such as chocolate candy and Asian condiments may include peanuts, a major allergen for many.

In a major step towards protecting consumers, in 2004 the United States passed a law requiring food manufacturers to include allergen information on their product labels, with regard to the eight most common substances. While this was a significant measure, it did not extend to requiring statements by manufacturers regarding the possibility of cross-contamination caused by processing different products on the same equipment.

Cross-contact statements are being including by some manufacturers on their labels voluntarily, but there is still the potential for allergic problems to be incurred when buying food items manufactured for the general population of consumers. It may take only a very small amount of an allergen to cause serious problems for someone sensitive to it. Foods processed specifically with the needs of the food allergy sufferer in mind will have far less probability of containing unwanted allergens.

Of course, it is always possible to contact a food manufacturer about the possibility of cross-contact with allergens in a specific process, or with respect to whether a particular substance is included in a product. However, when a company focuses specifically on producing products that are free of allergens and cross-contamination, there is a higher level of assurance concerning food safety. The benefits of allergy free foods include the knowledge that you and your loved ones with food allergies are at less risk for unexpected allergic problems.

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