2013-11-07

The Lyndhurst school district in New

Jersey voted in a special meeting 7 to 2 in favor of a policy

banning students in Kindergarten through 8th grade from

bringing any peanuts or peanut-containing foods onto school

grounds. High school students are now allowed to eat peanuts only

in the cafeteria. The district already had a restrictive peanut

policy, allowing the consumption of food containing peanut only in

designated classrooms by students in 4th through

8th grade, which came about  The anti-peanut policy

was first implemented after one child had an “apparent reaction.”

The parent of that child is a member of the school board. The local
Observer reports:

BOE member Jim Hooper told The Observer last week that

it was one of his sons who was stricken at the time. He elaborated:

“I have two sons who have peanut allergies. We don’t have

cafeterias in our elementary schools and sometime during the

2004-2005 school year, one of them who was attending Roosevelt

School where, at the time, the kids ate lunch in the gym, had a

reaction to something while he was in his gym class.”

The boy was taken to an area hospital and recovered, Hooper

said.

“If we had a new middle school and new cafeteria – which we’ve

tried to get [through a public referendum that failed] – where we

could come up with something that would allow non-allergic kids to

eat peanuts, then maybe we could control things better,” Hooper

said. “But we don’t. Some kids can go into anaphylactic shock from

being exposed to peanuts. So, it’s a safety issue. “I’m not

normally a guy who restricts things,” Hooper said, “but we’re

trying to protect the kids.”

The policy change came about after a “concerned parent” thought

the peanut policy wasn’t strict enough, says the school

superintendent. In a letter to parents she warned:

“Nut allergies can be life threatening. It takes only

the slightest smell, touch, or ingestion of peanuts, peanut butter,

peanut oil, a product that may contain trace amounts of peanuts or

a product that has been processed in a plant that also manufactures

peanut products, to cause a potential anaphylactic

reaction.

A few

years ago, a Harvard professor of medical sociology, Nicholas

Christakis, suggested that the increased worry over peanut

allergies resembled mass psychogenic illness, better known as

epidemic hysteria. Only about 150 people a year die from all food

allergies combined, he noted, similar to the number of people who

die from lightning strikes and earthquakes combined.

Show more