The Peterborough Examiner

Nuts pose little risk to air travellers with allergies, review finds

- ROB DRINKWATER

A Canadian Transporta­tion Agency study says air travellers with severe allergies to peanuts, nuts or sesame seeds face little risk from other people on a plane who may be eating snacks containing those products.

The probe, which was launched following a directive by former transport minister Lisa Ra itt, consulted experts on the risk of allergic reactions due to inhalation or skin contact on aircraft with 30 or more seats on domestic and internatio­nal flights.

Its findings, recently posted to the agency’s website, concluded there was“little to no evidence of a risk of allergic reactions” from touching or breathing in nut particles.

“Only accidental ingestion posed a risk of a serious allergic reaction ,” a summary of the findings states.

The report recommends airlines continue following mitigation measures, such as buffer zones for allergic passengers and announceme­nts to nearby seat mates, similar to ones that were part of a directive the agency issued to Air Canada in 2011 following complaints from two customers.

But the study’s recommenda­tions would actually shrink the buffer zone in economy class from a row on either side of the passenger to just the row where the allergic passenger is seated.

R honda Nugent, whose daughter has a severe peanut allergy and was one of the original complainan­ts, wants airlines to make a general announceme­nt to the whole plane that an allergic passenger is on board. She also wants passengers to refrain from eating foods containing nuts during the flight.

Nugent says her now 16-yearold daughter always avoided the bathroom when they flew because they didn’t want to risk skin contact with nuts.

“If somebody eats peanuts, and we all know how unclean people are, and they go to the bathroom and they touch every seat on the way down, and then she goes behind them and then she comes back and puts her hand in her mouth, she could easily have an anaphylact­ic shock ,” said Nugent, speaking from Conception Bay South, N.L.

The report only recommends seatmates within a buffer zone should be asked to refrain from eating peanuts, nuts or sesame seeds.

Other recommenda­tions suggest passengers with concerns about allergic reactions be allowed to wiped own their seats themselves, and that flight crews be trained to recognize an allergic reaction.

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