Food allergies
Food allergy is an immune response to a food or a substance, normally a protein or glyco-protein, found in a food naturally or by contamination, or produced by processing, cooking or digestion. In extreme cases, anaphylactic shock can happen. The whole body is affected often within minutes of exposure to the allergen but sometimes after hours. Anaphylactic shock is usually caused by food, insect stings such as bees, latex and drugs e.g. Aspirin. The symptoms range from rash, swelling of the mouth/throat, difficulty in breathing, drop in blood pressure, collapse, unconsciousness and death.
There are considered to be eight major serious food allergens which include milk, eggs, wheat, peanuts, shellfish, fish, soy and tree nuts (i.e. almond, brazil, cashew, hazelnut) which cause 90% of all food allergic reactions. The peanut is one of the chief foods to cause severe anaphylactic reactions or true allergic reaction.
Food allergies are recognised as a hazard in FSA Safer Food Better Business and CookSafe food safety assurance system.
As a caterer, you need to consider the following: -
- Ingredient labelling;
- training;
- separate areas and equipment;
- adequate cleaning and disinfection;
- hand washing;
- menus;
- how information is received from serving/waiting staff; and
- how to prevent cross contamination.
If you cannot guarantee that the food is free of food allergens, you should never guess as you can be prosecuted or cause an allergic reaction to a customer.
For further information go to:
- Food Standard Agency's Eatwell pages on eating out safely.
- Food Standard Agency's Eatwell pages on allergic reactions.
- Catering for Allergies
- Safer Food Better Business
- Allergy UK
This page was last updated on 02 October 2007
Bookmark this page using:
Find out more about social bookmarking.
These sites allow you to store, tag and share links across the internet. You can share these links both with friends and people with similar interests. You can also access your links from any computer you happen to be using.
If you come across a page on our site that you find interesting and want to save for future reference or share it with other people, simply click on one of these links to add to your list.
All of these sites are free to use but do require you to register. Once you have registered you can begin bookmarking. Each of the sites works slightly differently so use the links below to find out which service best suits your needs.
Find out more about social bookmarking at Wikipedia.











