A push to make flying safer for people with peanut allegies

A coalition of allergy organizations is pushing to require airlines to carry EpiPens to treat someone who goes into anaphylactic shock.
A coalition of allergy organizations is pushing to require airlines to carry EpiPens to treat someone who goes into anaphylactic shock. flickr/Anita Hart
A coalition of allergy organizations is pushing to require airlines to carry EpiPens to treat someone who goes into anaphylactic shock.
A coalition of allergy organizations is pushing to require airlines to carry EpiPens to treat someone who goes into anaphylactic shock. flickr/Anita Hart

A push to make flying safer for people with peanut allegies

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A coalition of allergy organizations is pushing to require airlines to carry EpiPens to treat someone who goes into anaphylactic shock. (flickr/Anita Hart)

Flying presents a particular set of challenges for people with allergies to peanuts and tree nuts. Even touching an armrest with residue on it can cause someone with an allergy to go into anaphylactic shock, where the airway closes and the person is unable to breathe.

A coalition of allergy organizations – the Food Allergy Research and Education, the Asthma and Allergy Network, and The Allergy and Asthma Foundation of America – is now pushing for legislation to make traveling a bit safer. They want all airlines to carry EpiPens or other epinephrine auto-injectors that could be used to treat someone having a severe allergic reaction.

Here & Now’s Robin Young talks with Lianne Mandelbaum, the mother of a child with a peanut allergy and the founder of No Nut Traveler, about how airlines could make travel safer.

Here & Now