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In reply to the discussion: Mom Demands School Go Peanut-Free For Allergic Child [View all]Neoma
(10,039 posts)My tour guide yesterday at college campus lost us on purpose even. I guess just don't give me the wheelchair argument, I'm in no mood for it.
But as I said elsewhere, I think the problem is that schools usually have crappy food to begin with and that needs to change. Hospitals accommodate diets. I would think a school system run by the government could do the same thing someday. Healthy food, better paid teachers, better exercise programs...
I agree with you on some points now that I've given it more thought. If the kid is allergic to airborne peanut smells or whatever, that's child endangerment to be in areas with possible peanut contamination. So this comes down to eating peanut contaminated foods. But the real issue is: exactly what resources and how much money does the mother have? Can she feed her child well in the first place? Is she the working poor? Because those things inhibit the mother from homeschooling, getting a teacher at home or anything else that would help for that matter. If she is in this situation, then this is really is a case of how can the school feed her child.