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Peanut Ban In Schools

Parents need to understand that a child can die even when peanut products are simply being served from the same kitchen. Sometimes a peanut ban makes sense.

I received a note this week from parents who were upset about a peanut ban at their North Carolina school — all because someone’s child has an allergy. But peanut bans in schools make sense if even one child has a known, potentially fatal allergy.

Young children love to share lunches — whether or not their parents instruct them otherwise. School parents need to understand that a child can die even when peanut products are simply being served from the same kitchen. For these reasons, almost half of the deaths from peanut allergies occur at school.

Non- allergic children can have all the peanut butter and jelly they want — at home!

Published on: August 18, 1999
About the Author

Alan Greene MD

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Dr. Greene is a practicing physician, author, national and international TEDx speaker, and global health advocate. He is a graduate of Princeton University and University of California San Francisco.
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