Every mid August and into early September, more nut free products are promoted in Canada, under back to school sales. These products are marketed as back to school items, not marketed for the nut allergic, though the nut allergic are consumers of these products, it is the parents sending their students to nut free schools in Canada, that make up the vast percentage of sales.
Many nut free Americans seek to order on line nut free products from Canada, most on line allergy grocers also have nut free items as well.
What difference does this make you may ask? In Canada nut free "only" dominates the market by far, not only due to the number of nut allergic families, but the number of nut free schools. (that I support) I am all for nut free products, as well as other "free from" foods.
If Presidents Choice truly wanted to be allergy friendly they would never have made rice milk on the same line as cows milk, while simultaneously expanding their nut free factories. Granted this was sometime ago and I am not aware if this is still the case.
A few years ago President's Choice made Fire Logs Made from Tree Nuts, this is not nut allergic aware, the product is no longer being sold. UPDATE President's Choice released another set of Fire Logs That Contain Nuts Shells.
How strange that a company that makes nut free products, also makes non food items made from nuts. Their are other companies that make firelogs made from treenuts. I don't know of any other companies that make both nut free products. and fire place logs from nut shells.
The newest non food item made from nuts made by President's Choice:
PC Baby Wipes PC Sensitive Baby Wipes
"Ingredients Water, glycerine, prunus amygdalus dulcis (sweet almond) oil, persea gratissima (avocado) oil, cocos nucifera (coconut) oil, aloe barbadensis leaf extract, tocopheryl acetate, chamomilla recutita (matricaria) flower extract, polysorbate 80, sorbitan oleate, phenoxyethanol, sodium benzoate, potassium sorbate, citric acid."
Thanks The Allergy Mom for telling us about this on your Facebook Page
I support Nut Free Products, nut free schools, as well as products that are free from multiple food allergens. Can the nut allergic feel good about a company that makes nut free back to school products, that are not so aware of other allergens, and also makes non food items made from nuts? See also my Chemurgy and Allergens Blog for more non food items made from allergens.
Showing posts with label labelling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label labelling. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Monday, November 8, 2010
Precautionary Labelling of Priority Allergens
Debbie Bruce from Mississauga Anaphylaxis Group asked me to pass this along:
November 4, 2010
Subject: Precautionary Labelling of Priority Allergens
Ask: That the Government of Canada pass allergen food labelling legislation NOW!
Anaphylaxis is a life threatening medical condition affecting 2.5 million Canadians.
There is no cure.
There is no treatment.
The only way to manage anaphylaxis is through strict avoidance of the offending allergen.
As a family with two children with life threatening food allergies, their safety depends on accurate food labelling that is clear, accurate and complete.
The general public - including the average family dealing with anaphylaxis is not aware of these gaps in packaged goods labelling. They trust the current labelling is accurately representing whether an item is safe to eat - it does not - putting lives significantly at risk.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Did you know the following procedures are VOLUNTARY:
Cautionary statements such as "May contain..." and "Manufactured in a facility that processes..."
Currently, manufacturers are using approximately 30 different wordings for precautionary labelling statements on prepackaged foods. But whether they put it on at all is voluntary.
Implementation of Good Manufacturing Practices specifically for allergen handling.
Use of a standardized approach to Risk Assessments of potential cross-contamination.
Standardized documentation with on-site storage of findings of Risk Assessments
Education program for consumers
Consumer notification system.
In July 2008, we were very pleased when Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government announced new food labelling regulations to make it easier for food allergic Canadians and those who shop for them to read ingredient labels.
Anaphylaxis Canada worked with Health Canada in an 18-month consultation process. However, while the regulations were expected to receive final approval in February of this year, we are still waiting. Worse, there is a concern that if these regulations are not approved soon the time line for such approval will expire and we will have to start over.
This is unacceptable. We rely on labelling accuracy to keep us from accidentally ingesting an allergen we are allergic to.
This legislation would require all food package labels to clearly and thoroughly list the top 10 priority allergens and gluten among ingredients.
Prepackaged Food Manufacturers would be required to disclose "May contain..." and "Manufactured in a facility...)
In July 2008, following Allergic Living’s write-in campaign of 4,000 letters, the federal government announced it would push ahead with new regulations. We all greeted this as great news.
After a long consultation process, the regulations were ready in February. But still they are not law, still there are no firm answers on “when” they will become law.
Now, we have learned the regulations will expire by the year’s end if not passed. This will mean starting the whole process – a decade in the making – again from scratch. This is unconscionable!
“This clearly affects literally millions of Canadians in one way or another,” Health Minister Tony Clement said in an interview with Allergic Living Magazine. “Either people suffering from allergies or celiac disease, or parents who are trying to do the best for their kids who have these kinds of issues.”
I invite you to come grocery shopping with me, or with someone you know who is food allergic. See first hand, the time consuming, thought process that must go into EVERY purchase – and not just food, but cosmetics and toiletries as well. We try to intuitively decipher which manufacturers can be counted on to give accurate information. We live by the motto, “When in doubt, check it out…or do without…”
Many of us have anaphylactic children who are venturing off to university and are now responsible for managing their allergies on their own. Family, friends, day cares, schools, etc. try to shop for items that are safe. I have spent my career in the packaged goods industry – so I know the questions to ask and who to ask…and I have a difficult time assessing the level of risk. How can we expect them to manage?
Please help us get this labelling law passed now.
Thank you,
Debbie Bruce
Anaphylaxis Support
MAG (Mississauga Anaphylaxis Group)
NASK (Niagara Anaphylaxis Support & Knowledge)
905 828 1954; 3033 Harvey Crescent; Mississauga, Ontario L5L 4W2
To: The Right Honourable Stephen Harper
Prime Minister
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A2
Telephone: (613) 992-4211
Fax: (613) 941-6900
Email: pm@pm.gc.ca
The Honourable Leona Aglukkaq, P.C., M.P.
Health Canada
Brooke Claxton Building
Tunney's Pasture
Postal Locator: 0906C
Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0K9
Telephone: (613) 992-2848
Fax: (613) 996-9764
Email: minister_ministre@hc-sc.gc.ca
The Honourable Stockwell Day
President of the Treasury Board of Canada and Minister for the Asia-Pacific Gateway
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Strategic Communications and Ministerial Affairs
L'Esplanade Laurier, 9th Floor, East Tower
140 O'Connor Street
Ottawa, Canada K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 995-1702
Fax: (613) 995-1154
Email: Day.S@parl.gc.ca
See also Show Your Support Food Allergen Label From Allergic Living
November 4, 2010
Subject: Precautionary Labelling of Priority Allergens
Ask: That the Government of Canada pass allergen food labelling legislation NOW!
Anaphylaxis is a life threatening medical condition affecting 2.5 million Canadians.
There is no cure.
There is no treatment.
The only way to manage anaphylaxis is through strict avoidance of the offending allergen.
As a family with two children with life threatening food allergies, their safety depends on accurate food labelling that is clear, accurate and complete.
The general public - including the average family dealing with anaphylaxis is not aware of these gaps in packaged goods labelling. They trust the current labelling is accurately representing whether an item is safe to eat - it does not - putting lives significantly at risk.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Did you know the following procedures are VOLUNTARY:
Cautionary statements such as "May contain..." and "Manufactured in a facility that processes..."
Currently, manufacturers are using approximately 30 different wordings for precautionary labelling statements on prepackaged foods. But whether they put it on at all is voluntary.
Implementation of Good Manufacturing Practices specifically for allergen handling.
Use of a standardized approach to Risk Assessments of potential cross-contamination.
Standardized documentation with on-site storage of findings of Risk Assessments
Education program for consumers
Consumer notification system.
In July 2008, we were very pleased when Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government announced new food labelling regulations to make it easier for food allergic Canadians and those who shop for them to read ingredient labels.
Anaphylaxis Canada worked with Health Canada in an 18-month consultation process. However, while the regulations were expected to receive final approval in February of this year, we are still waiting. Worse, there is a concern that if these regulations are not approved soon the time line for such approval will expire and we will have to start over.
This is unacceptable. We rely on labelling accuracy to keep us from accidentally ingesting an allergen we are allergic to.
This legislation would require all food package labels to clearly and thoroughly list the top 10 priority allergens and gluten among ingredients.
Prepackaged Food Manufacturers would be required to disclose "May contain..." and "Manufactured in a facility...)
In July 2008, following Allergic Living’s write-in campaign of 4,000 letters, the federal government announced it would push ahead with new regulations. We all greeted this as great news.
After a long consultation process, the regulations were ready in February. But still they are not law, still there are no firm answers on “when” they will become law.
Now, we have learned the regulations will expire by the year’s end if not passed. This will mean starting the whole process – a decade in the making – again from scratch. This is unconscionable!
“This clearly affects literally millions of Canadians in one way or another,” Health Minister Tony Clement said in an interview with Allergic Living Magazine. “Either people suffering from allergies or celiac disease, or parents who are trying to do the best for their kids who have these kinds of issues.”
I invite you to come grocery shopping with me, or with someone you know who is food allergic. See first hand, the time consuming, thought process that must go into EVERY purchase – and not just food, but cosmetics and toiletries as well. We try to intuitively decipher which manufacturers can be counted on to give accurate information. We live by the motto, “When in doubt, check it out…or do without…”
Many of us have anaphylactic children who are venturing off to university and are now responsible for managing their allergies on their own. Family, friends, day cares, schools, etc. try to shop for items that are safe. I have spent my career in the packaged goods industry – so I know the questions to ask and who to ask…and I have a difficult time assessing the level of risk. How can we expect them to manage?
Please help us get this labelling law passed now.
Thank you,
Debbie Bruce
Anaphylaxis Support
MAG (Mississauga Anaphylaxis Group)
NASK (Niagara Anaphylaxis Support & Knowledge)
905 828 1954; 3033 Harvey Crescent; Mississauga, Ontario L5L 4W2
To: The Right Honourable Stephen Harper
Prime Minister
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A2
Telephone: (613) 992-4211
Fax: (613) 941-6900
Email: pm@pm.gc.ca
The Honourable Leona Aglukkaq, P.C., M.P.
Health Canada
Brooke Claxton Building
Tunney's Pasture
Postal Locator: 0906C
Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0K9
Telephone: (613) 992-2848
Fax: (613) 996-9764
Email: minister_ministre@hc-sc.gc.ca
The Honourable Stockwell Day
President of the Treasury Board of Canada and Minister for the Asia-Pacific Gateway
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Strategic Communications and Ministerial Affairs
L'Esplanade Laurier, 9th Floor, East Tower
140 O'Connor Street
Ottawa, Canada K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 995-1702
Fax: (613) 995-1154
Email: Day.S@parl.gc.ca
See also Show Your Support Food Allergen Label From Allergic Living
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Show Your Support: Food Allergen Label Law
From Allergic Living
Show Your Support: Food Allergen Label Law
Dear Friends,
Your help is urgently needed. We need your voice to tell the Government of Canada that it must pass the food label legislation that it promised 2 years ago.
This legislation would require all food package labels to clearly and thoroughly list the top 10 priority allergens and gluten among ingredients.
In July 2008, following Allergic Living’s write-in campaign of 4,000 letters, the federal government announced it would push ahead with new regulations. We all greeted this as great news.
After a long consultation process, the regulations were ready in February. But still they are not law, still there are no firm answers on “when” they will become law.
Now, Allergic Living has learned that the regulations will expire by the year’s end if not passed. This will mean starting the whole process – a decade in the making – again from scratch. This is unconscionable!
Please join Allergic Living, Anaphylaxis Canada, AAIA, the Canadian Celiac Association, and other concerned groups by writing a letter (send by e-mail or mail) to Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Also send copies to the Health Minister, your own MP, and President of the Treasury Board. (Contacts are below.)
Your voice, and your stories of how important accurate food labels are to you and your family, will make a difference. Together, we can make this happen. The government must hear that this legislation is not optional – these regulations are essential, and will in fact save lives.
See further information on the food label regulations and this campaign here: http://www.allergicliving.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=5984&p=34174#p34174
Please get your friends and family to write, too. Thank you so much for your action and your support!
Sincerely,
Gwen Smith
Editor, Allergic Living magazine
Contact Information
Prime Minister Stephen Harper
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A2
Telephone: (613) 992-4211
Fax: (613) 941-6900
Email: pm@pm.gc.ca
Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq
Health Canada
Brooke Claxton Building
Tunney's Pasture
Postal Locator: 0906C
Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0K9
Telephone: (613) 992-2848
Fax: (613) 996-9764
Email: minister_ministre@hc-sc.gc.ca
Stockwell Day
President of the Treasury Board of Canada
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Strategic Communications and Ministerial Affairs
L'Esplanade Laurier, 9th Floor, East Tower
140 O'Connor Street
Ottawa, Canada K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 995-1702
Fax: (613) 995-1154
Email: Day.S@parl.gc.ca
Show Your Support: Food Allergen Label Law
Dear Friends,
Your help is urgently needed. We need your voice to tell the Government of Canada that it must pass the food label legislation that it promised 2 years ago.
This legislation would require all food package labels to clearly and thoroughly list the top 10 priority allergens and gluten among ingredients.
In July 2008, following Allergic Living’s write-in campaign of 4,000 letters, the federal government announced it would push ahead with new regulations. We all greeted this as great news.
After a long consultation process, the regulations were ready in February. But still they are not law, still there are no firm answers on “when” they will become law.
Now, Allergic Living has learned that the regulations will expire by the year’s end if not passed. This will mean starting the whole process – a decade in the making – again from scratch. This is unconscionable!
Please join Allergic Living, Anaphylaxis Canada, AAIA, the Canadian Celiac Association, and other concerned groups by writing a letter (send by e-mail or mail) to Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Also send copies to the Health Minister, your own MP, and President of the Treasury Board. (Contacts are below.)
Your voice, and your stories of how important accurate food labels are to you and your family, will make a difference. Together, we can make this happen. The government must hear that this legislation is not optional – these regulations are essential, and will in fact save lives.
See further information on the food label regulations and this campaign here: http://www.allergicliving.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=5984&p=34174#p34174
Please get your friends and family to write, too. Thank you so much for your action and your support!
Sincerely,
Gwen Smith
Editor, Allergic Living magazine
Contact Information
Prime Minister Stephen Harper
Office of the Prime Minister
80 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A2
Telephone: (613) 992-4211
Fax: (613) 941-6900
Email: pm@pm.gc.ca
Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq
Health Canada
Brooke Claxton Building
Tunney's Pasture
Postal Locator: 0906C
Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0K9
Telephone: (613) 992-2848
Fax: (613) 996-9764
Email: minister_ministre@hc-sc.gc.ca
Stockwell Day
President of the Treasury Board of Canada
Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat
Strategic Communications and Ministerial Affairs
L'Esplanade Laurier, 9th Floor, East Tower
140 O'Connor Street
Ottawa, Canada K1A 0R5
Telephone: (613) 995-1702
Fax: (613) 995-1154
Email: Day.S@parl.gc.ca
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Hidden Milk
Happy Winter Solstice, to all those who celebrate the shortest day of the year.
Here are some sources of milk.
Casein paint paint derived from milk
Tryptone Tryptone is similar to casamino acids, both being digests of casein.
Casamino Acids mixture of amino acids and some very small peptides obtained from acid hydrolysis of casein.
Recaldent milk derived product that strengthens and remineralises teeth.
Lactogobulin lactoglobulin is the major whey protein of cow's milk, and is also present in many other mammalian species; a notable exception being humans.
This is why we need clear labelling.
Here are some sources of milk.
Casein paint paint derived from milk
Tryptone Tryptone is similar to casamino acids, both being digests of casein.
Casamino Acids mixture of amino acids and some very small peptides obtained from acid hydrolysis of casein.
Recaldent milk derived product that strengthens and remineralises teeth.
Lactogobulin lactoglobulin is the major whey protein of cow's milk, and is also present in many other mammalian species; a notable exception being humans.
This is why we need clear labelling.
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Study
Canadian Food Labelling Research Study
Important research is underway to benefit families living with life threatening allergies.
Ann Clark, from McGill University and Dr. Susan Waserman, McMaster University Medical Centre are principal investigators of the study.
Simply complete a questionnaire which takes only 10-20 minutes.
Everyone is urged to participate. It is only through the involvement of affected families that research can be done so we can reap the benefits.
To participate email: food.labelling@epimgh.mcgill.ca .
McGill University Health Centre
Important research is underway to benefit families living with life threatening allergies.
Ann Clark, from McGill University and Dr. Susan Waserman, McMaster University Medical Centre are principal investigators of the study.
Simply complete a questionnaire which takes only 10-20 minutes.
Everyone is urged to participate. It is only through the involvement of affected families that research can be done so we can reap the benefits.
To participate email: food.labelling@epimgh.mcgill.ca .
McGill University Health Centre
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