SesameFree.Org

Saving Lives By Raising Awareness

  • Full Screen
  • Wide Screen
  • Narrow Screen
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size



Handmade Greeting CardsKyle Dine is a Canadian musician whose CD "You Must Be Nuts!" contains 14 songs that are meant to educate and empower those dealing with food allergies. His live shows raise school allergy awareness through his fun, interactive food allergy performances!Please check out our charity auction on CharityAuction.US and support our good cause!Proud sponsor of SesameFree.Org's Charity AuctionWe Go The Extra Mile For Our Ideal Members!Stay Fit And Do Good By Raising Funds or Awareness For your Cause!Book Reviews, Book A Thons, Book Fairs and More!
Sesame Free CharityAuction.US Ad Banner

Kids With Food Allergies Are Often Victims Of Bullying, Research Finds

E-mail Print PDF

In the first-of-its-kind study, researchers have pinpointed a troubling social trend: children who suffer from food allergies are very often suffering at the hands of school bullies as well. But it gets worse: not only are these kids teased and harassed by other classmates, but they are also being taunted by teachers who perhaps don’t fully understand their plight.

 

 

 

What is going on here?

Doctors at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York report that approximately 35 percent of children with food allergies over age five have experienced bullying, teasing, or harassment as a result of their allergies. Of those, the study says, 86 percent experienced repeated episodes, with classmates being the most common perpetrators. But beyond that, more than 20 percent reported harassment or teasing from teachers and other school staff, according to the findings published in the medical journal Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology.

Scott Sicherer, MD, Professor of Pediatrics, Jaffe Food Allergy Institute at Mount Sinai and the study’s lead author, suggests that much of the bullying here is due to ignorance about what food allergies are all about. “It’s a situation that’s mysterious to the outside person,” Dr. Sicherer said in an interview. “The kid thinks, ‘I can eat everything,’ but that kid over there is always worried and anxious about eating — that makes him different and it’s that difference that might lead the first kid to test the waters with teasing and harassment.”

The adult taunts are perhaps more subtle. Dr. Sicherer says that clueless teachers might inadvertently be contributing to the problem. “Maybe the teacher says, ‘We were going to have a birthday party today with cake, but since Johnny here can’t eat it, we’re having apples instead.’”

Perhaps most disturbing is that in several reported cases of bullying, the specific allergen was used by the bully against his victim. Indeed, Dr. Sicherer says he’s seen bullied patients who say another kid smeared peanut butter on the water fountain, making it unusable for the allergic child. “From these reports,” researchers write, “it is clear that bullying, teasing, and harassment may pose a concern to food-allergic patients and their parents from a psychological and possibly a physical standpoint.”


Add a comment
 

Latest Forums

Contact Us

Phone: 1-267-888-SAFE

1-267-888-7233

You are here: Home