Saturday, January 9, 2010

Cupcake Plates How Do You Work With Children's Food Intolerances/allergies When They Get Older, Go To Birthday Parties, Etc?

How do you work with children's food intolerances/allergies when they get older, go to birthday parties, etc? - cupcake plates

My son is only 4, so we always watch what he eats and is fairly easy to do, but I dare not imagine in the next issues, we can find.

Already in the freezer for some cupcakes at preschool age, so that if someone brings a birthday cake in the still under treatment, but so far we have compared with slightly more than that.

What to do when your child to a birthday celebration, especially when invited to a place like McDonald's or the scene of another child? You can get almost everything you have to eat at those places, and while McDonald's is very happy for us to make our own bread, some ingredients, etc., it is difficult if there is any on plates of cakes and pastries and sausages with chips and he can not say that.
(BTW - the topic of food additives - preservatives, colors, flavors - and there is a severe allergy, but it affects all sorts of terrible ways, and not worth a week of health and behavioral problems because he is a piece of cake)

Thank you!

4 comments:

jms62394 said...

I have been teaching for several years and had several children with allergies. You will notice that the older they get, the easier it is because they know that their "condition" of better quality. Most parents bring cake and other food they can eat. You will find that once can see the "bad" reaction to one or the other, I do not eat the food anyway.

If you talk to him, and thus more negative than a hyperactive, you can check, allowing you to 1, what in the game. I have a child who is lactose Intollerante. It can do nothing with milk, because if it has a certain amount, your body can not break and put hives and stomach sick. However, during the games, etc. have a piece of cake or 1 / 2 a cookie, etc. .. Small amounts of supervision, which seems to deal with it.

I prefer to say, they need food, give, or less of what you can not walk, eat the party.

Lydia said...

As it grows, it is up to you to learn to be strong character, deal with these things and more aware of things. If there is a danger to health by warning him a medical bracelet or necklace. Not to impose their problems on others, for example, do not try to "work" of teachers or the mothers of their friends.

Anonymous said...

I wish I could help, but my daughter grew their food (milk protein), allergies to 4 years and my son is only 2 ½ years, so you just have to wait and see if you met them. (allergic to milk proteins as well), I also (Limit consumption of sugar from my son because of the type of diabetes that is my husband.) I believe that no matter where you take a food allergic / sensitive child who takes chance, can he / she communicate with potential dangers. My advice is keep doing what you do and know how something is safe for your child.

What bothers me is when you're in a restaurant and the server wants to explain why they need to know if the chicken is fried in the milk in it ... Or, if you go shopping and someone offers your child a cookie, and if he wants you to say "No", because the butter may contain ... Or, if you cut your hair and give you a lolly-pop without having to ask ... (try again this year, a boy of 2 years in the public. & #039; is not pretty!)

Anonymous said...

I wish I could help, but my daughter grew their food (milk protein), allergies to 4 years and my son is only 2 ½ years, so you just have to wait and see if you met them. (allergic to milk proteins as well), I also (Limit consumption of sugar from my son because of the type of diabetes that is my husband.) I believe that no matter where you take a food allergic / sensitive child who takes chance, can he / she communicate with potential dangers. My advice is keep doing what you do and know how something is safe for your child.

What bothers me is when you're in a restaurant and the server wants to explain why they need to know if the chicken is fried in the milk in it ... Or, if you go shopping and someone offers your child a cookie, and if he wants you to say "No", because the butter may contain ... Or, if you cut your hair and give you a lolly-pop without having to ask ... (try again this year, a boy of 2 years in the public. & #039; is not pretty!)

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