QuoteInterim Guidance Regarding Early Peanut Introduction
QuotePediatricians, dermatologists, and family practitioners will be urged to work toward updating the guidelines. "I don't think it should become a turf issue," said Dr Lack. "What matters is expertise. It could be a pediatrician, a family doctor, or a dermatologist who assesses the child and does a skin-prick test. The important thing is training in these procedures, and recognition."
"This means a basic knowledge about atopic eczema, egg allergy, and milk allergy, which are all risk factors for peanut allergy, and then of course skin-prick testing, which in the LEAP study we found to be invaluable for dissecting risk categories," Dr Du Toit explained. "Worldwide, not all patients — in fact a real minority of allergic patients — have access to even those basic diagnostic skills."
On top of that, although infants in the LEAP cohort had only mild to moderate allergic reactions, and no hospitalizations or epinephrine were required, "clinicians need to be able to deal with young infants who have an allergic reaction," he said.
"If any high-risk challenges were to take place, they should only occur in experienced hands and in the appropriate setting with resuscitation skills and facilities," Dr Du Toit explained.
Quote... the suggestion being made is that we need to act on this now
If you're going to make a recommendation like that, there should be an infrastructure in place to handle the volume of patients that we're going to see," Dr Greenhawt warned.
Quote from: GoingNuts on February 27, 2015, 07:06:41 AM
Two Editorials. The first one had me seeing 10 different shades of red:
http://www.newsday.com/opinion/columnists/lane-filler/don-t-get-nutty-over-peanuts-lane-filler-1.9973081
I much prefer the second, from Snacking Safely:
http://snacksafely.com/2015/02/of-babies-peanuts-and-allergy-moms/