Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Environment & Energy
In reply to the discussion: is the end of monsanto near? prop 37 succeeding as nations ban GMO [View all]proverbialwisdom
(4,959 posts)47. Business Section NYT: 'The Epi-Pen's Maker Invests in Expansion As Allergy Rates in Children Rise'
EXCERPT: A study last year in the journal Pediatrics found that about one in 13 children had a food allergy, and nearly 40 percent of those with allergies had severe reactions.
Also: http://www.ageofautism.com/2012/09/childhood-american-style.html#comments
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/08/business/mylan-invests-in-epipen-as-child-allergies-increase.html?pagewanted=all
September 7, 2012
Tiny Lifesaver for a Growing Worry
By KATIE THOMAS
It has become an all-too-familiar story in schools across the country: a child eats a peanut or is stung by a bee and suffers an immediate, life-threatening allergic reaction known as anaphylaxis.
If parents and school authorities know about the allergy and a doctors prescription is on file, a nurse can quickly give an injection of epinephrine, saving the childs life.
But school nurses in many districts face an agonizing choice if a child without a prescription develops a sudden reaction to an undiagnosed allergy. Should they inject epinephrine and risk losing their nursing license for dispensing it without a prescription, or call 911 and pray the paramedics arrive in time?
After a 7-year-old girl died in January in a similar case in Virginia, the state passed a law that allows any child who needs an emergency shot to get one. Beginning this month, every school district in Virginia is required to keep epinephrine injectors on hand for use in an emergency. Illinois, Georgia and Maryland have passed similar laws, and school nurses are pushing for one in Ohio. A lobbying effort backed by Mylan, which markets the most commonly used injector, the EpiPen, made by Pfizer, led to the introduction last year of a federal bill that would encourage states to pass such laws.
Mylan has also lobbied state legislatures around the country directly and is passing out free EpiPens this fall to any qualifying school that wants them.
When a child is having an anaphylactic reaction, the only thing that can save her life is epinephrine, said Maria L. Acebal, the chief executive of the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network. 911 doesnt get there fast enough.
The efforts are an acknowledgment of the rising rates of food allergies among children and a handful of deaths from allergies across the country. In many schools, children carry their own epinephrine injectors in their backpacks to use themselves, if theyre old enough, or the devices are stored on their behalf in nurses offices.
<...>
[font style=color:blue]Although no one knows exactly why, the rate of food allergies among children appears to be on the rise.[/font] One survey found that in 2008, one in 70 children was allergic to peanuts, compared with one in 250 in 1997.
I dont think its overdiagnosis, said Dr. Scott H. Sicherer, the author of the report and a researcher at the Jaffe Food Allergy Institute at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Manhattan. There really seems to be a difference.
A study last year in the journal Pediatrics found that about one in 13 children had a food allergy, and nearly 40 percent of those with allergies had severe reactions. A recent survey in Massachusetts, where schools are permitted to administer epinephrine to any student, found that one-quarter of students who had to be given the drug for a reaction did not know they had an allergy. But in many schools, employees are not allowed to use epinephrine injectors on children who do not have a prescription.
<...>
September 7, 2012
Tiny Lifesaver for a Growing Worry
By KATIE THOMAS
It has become an all-too-familiar story in schools across the country: a child eats a peanut or is stung by a bee and suffers an immediate, life-threatening allergic reaction known as anaphylaxis.
If parents and school authorities know about the allergy and a doctors prescription is on file, a nurse can quickly give an injection of epinephrine, saving the childs life.
But school nurses in many districts face an agonizing choice if a child without a prescription develops a sudden reaction to an undiagnosed allergy. Should they inject epinephrine and risk losing their nursing license for dispensing it without a prescription, or call 911 and pray the paramedics arrive in time?
After a 7-year-old girl died in January in a similar case in Virginia, the state passed a law that allows any child who needs an emergency shot to get one. Beginning this month, every school district in Virginia is required to keep epinephrine injectors on hand for use in an emergency. Illinois, Georgia and Maryland have passed similar laws, and school nurses are pushing for one in Ohio. A lobbying effort backed by Mylan, which markets the most commonly used injector, the EpiPen, made by Pfizer, led to the introduction last year of a federal bill that would encourage states to pass such laws.
Mylan has also lobbied state legislatures around the country directly and is passing out free EpiPens this fall to any qualifying school that wants them.
When a child is having an anaphylactic reaction, the only thing that can save her life is epinephrine, said Maria L. Acebal, the chief executive of the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network. 911 doesnt get there fast enough.
The efforts are an acknowledgment of the rising rates of food allergies among children and a handful of deaths from allergies across the country. In many schools, children carry their own epinephrine injectors in their backpacks to use themselves, if theyre old enough, or the devices are stored on their behalf in nurses offices.
<...>
[font style=color:blue]Although no one knows exactly why, the rate of food allergies among children appears to be on the rise.[/font] One survey found that in 2008, one in 70 children was allergic to peanuts, compared with one in 250 in 1997.
I dont think its overdiagnosis, said Dr. Scott H. Sicherer, the author of the report and a researcher at the Jaffe Food Allergy Institute at Mount Sinai Medical Center in Manhattan. There really seems to be a difference.
A study last year in the journal Pediatrics found that about one in 13 children had a food allergy, and nearly 40 percent of those with allergies had severe reactions. A recent survey in Massachusetts, where schools are permitted to administer epinephrine to any student, found that one-quarter of students who had to be given the drug for a reaction did not know they had an allergy. But in many schools, employees are not allowed to use epinephrine injectors on children who do not have a prescription.
<...>
Also: http://www.ageofautism.com/2012/09/childhood-american-style.html#comments
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
47 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
Absolutely not. See 'Scientists Under Attack' (German documentary on INDEPENDENT biotech research).
proverbialwisdom
Sep 2012
#33
Thanks for the great info, proverbial! If I believed in Evil, Monsatan would be top of my list. They
Mnemosyne
Sep 2012
#42
If you are under the impression that the world can be fed with "organic" food, you are very mistaken
Buzz Clik
Sep 2012
#19
hey even Haiti after disaster and in need of food help rejected the free GMO seeds
lunasun
Sep 2012
#29
FYI, some reading about Monsanto and ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Commission); Bain, too.
proverbialwisdom
Sep 2012
#23
Whats so ignorant about wanting to know what's in the food-like substances that we ingest?
arikara
Sep 2012
#44
I stopped buying a number of products that contain high-fructose corn syrup
LiberalEsto
Sep 2012
#15
i doubt it high end chefs using local organic is rich peoples fare from what service workers say
lunasun
Sep 2012
#38
So they have nothing to fear and should have no objection to the labeling for us 5% who read them.
Overseas
Sep 2012
#24
This will be a big fight mainly due to the fact Monsanto has all the seeds patented! The farmers
jonesgirl
Sep 2012
#13
Finding a Monsanto GMO corn pesticide in the blood of pregnant women/umbilcal cord samples is ok?
proverbialwisdom
Sep 2012
#35
So what, this is just a labeling scheme. They're not banning products from market.
Sirveri
Oct 2012
#45
You might wish to reconsider the monstrous implications of your post which I doubt you meant.
proverbialwisdom
Oct 2012
#46
Business Section NYT: 'The Epi-Pen's Maker Invests in Expansion As Allergy Rates in Children Rise'
proverbialwisdom
Oct 2012
#47