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Creates AllergyEats, The Fastest-Growing Source for Finding Allergy-Friendly Restaurants

BOSTON, MA –  As a successful mutual fund manager at Fidelity Investments, Paul Antico was used to problem-solving during high pressure situations.  But one night a few years ago, he faced a different sort of challenge – driving around for more than two hours with hungry, grumpy children in the backseat, searching for a restaurant that could accommodate his sons’ food allergies.

Frustrated with the inconsistencies in restaurants – some were willing to cook meals without dairy, nuts, eggs and his sons’ other “trigger foods,” and some were not – Antico wondered why there wasn’t a quick, easy online restaurant guide that indicated where food-allergic individuals could more comfortably eat. 

So when he left his job at Fidelity in June, 2008, he immediately started developing AllergyEats (www.AllergyEats.com ), now the fastest growing source for finding allergy-friendly restaurants.  This free, user-friendly website provides valuable peer-based feedback about how well (or poorly) restaurants accommodate the needs of food-allergic customers.

“As a parent of food allergic children, it’s important to know in advance whether a restaurant can accommodate my kids’ unique food requirements.  AllergyEats provides a forum where food-allergic families can exchange feedback about their restaurant experiences,” said Paul Antico, Founder of AllergyEats.

AllergyEats lists well over 600,000 restaurants nationwide, which food allergic diners can rate.  The site also offers information on restaurants’ menus (including gluten-free menus), allergen lists, nutrition information, certifications, web links, directions and more.

Most restaurant review sites include information about establishments’ food, ambiance or service, but AllergyEats is singularly focused on food allergies, with peer reviews spotlighting where people with food allergies or intolerances can more comfortably eat.

To rate a restaurant on AllergyEats, users answer just three simple questions about their dining experiences, which takes less than a minute. Then, the answers are compiled into an objective “allergy-friendliness rating” that provides at-a-glance information about the “allergy friendliness” of specific restaurants, helping users find a comfortable place to dine. There’s also a section for written comments, which focuses specifically on food-allergy related information.

AllergyEats is searchable by geographic location, and includes maps and driving directions to restaurants nationally. 

In the past two-and-a-half years, Antico has gone from a high-powered financial executive to a passionate food-allergy advocate.  In addition to launching AllergyEats, he serves on the Board of Directors of the Asthma & Allergy Foundation of America New England Chapter and works to increase awareness and spread knowledge about food allergies within the food allergy community and to the general population.

Antico, a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has always been determined and tenacious, graduating from the prestigious college with a near-perfect GPA and serving as President of the student body.  He excelled at Fidelity, consistently surpassing industry benchmarks, and providing shareholders of the Small Cap Stock Fund with a 147.35% return versus the 67.84% they would have gotten in a Russell 2000 index fund over a period of 10 years.

“My ‘a-ha’ moment was driving around the suburbs of Boston for two hours, looking for a restaurant that could accommodate my sons’ food allergies, while they were complaining in the backseat because they were so hungry.  I finally found a place that would serve my kids plain egg-free pasta, but was very frustrated by this ‘trial and error’ approach to finding places where we could comfortably eat,” Antico explained.  “I realized that other food-allergic families faced similar challenges and decided to create a solution.”

Literally hungry for this new challenge, Antico works around the clock to promote and expand AllergyEats, asking for input and suggestions from food-allergy groups and individuals.  Additionally, he’s encouraging restaurants to improve their food-allergy policies and menus, promoting the importance of staff training about food allergy issues and applauding restaurants that are especially allergy-friendly. 

AllergyEats has received a number of endorsements from highly-respected food, health and allergy organizations, including the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, Gluten Intolerance Group, and the Massachusetts Restaurant Association.   Additionally, AllergyEats is forming exciting partnerships with other organizations, including restaurant chains, established food allergy non-profits and more.

Since its February launch, AllergyEats has exploded in popularity, demonstrating that the site meets a huge need within the food allergy community.  AllergyEats has also experienced a tremendous surge of interest on its associated social media sites, with food-allergic “fans” regularly sharing ideas, recommendations and feedback on Facebook, Twitter and the AllergyEats Blog (www.allergyeats.com/blog). For more information, please visit www.AllergyEats.com.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010 @ 5:43 pm   4907 Views   MamaCow   Like
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The story of a child with a food allergy is all to familiar to many of us.  Having an older food allergic child,  I have noticed over the last 18 years, the rise in the number of children suffering from dangerous food allergies.  Although, our family has a milk allergy, I have noticed a major increase in Peanut allergies.  Interesting, Heather Fraser has lived it and research it, in her new book, The History of the Peanut Allergy Epidemic.

Please check out her book website and buy a copy.  Her story and research is amazing - http://www.peanutallergyepidemic.com

Here is a little bit from her site:

A peanut allergy story

In 1995, my 13 month old son had an anaphylactic reaction to peanut butter.

He wasn’t crying, in fact he was quite cheerful as he slowly fused with colour. Intense red and white blotches quickly formed on his face and arms. His eye lids thickened. I'd never seen anything like it.

I snatched him from his high chair and we ran.

Perhaps we were both too stunned, too gobsmacked with disbelief to cry or worry. It was just so unexpected. Even when we arrived at the ER and I announced that my son had eaten peanut butter I could not fathom the response of the nurses. They leapt across desks, caps flying, yelling, wheeling, snatching up the boy, jabbing his little arm with needles, stabbing an IV into the back of his hand. Screaming now with fear and confusion, he was strapped down so he couldn’t move, pumped with drugs, hooked to monitors and drips.

I stood behind the team of four or six or there might have been 10 doctors and nurses, whatever the exact number it seemed totally out of proportion to my announcement that we had just eaten peanut butter. How could a food I had eaten for years cause such a reaction?

They fussed for what seemed like hours until they finally unstrapped him....

After a round of blood and scratch tests, the doctor diagnosed our toddler with allergies to peanuts and nuts. He confirmed that our son was highly reactive perhaps even to just the odour of peanuts. With drugs we had managed to contain and recover from the reaction -- the next time we may not be so lucky. And there seemed not way to correct the condition. We were given a life long script for an Epipen and began adjusting to the idea that these foods could kill him.

On constant alert

Like other families with food allergic children we lived in a state of constant tension. I stopped buying processed foods and made all our meals from scratch. We stopped going to restaurants. Wherever we went, I was vigilant for smears of peanut butter left on tables, playground equipment or on grocery cart handles. Trace amounts on the skin or lip, we were warned, could trigger a deadly reaction. The allergy also posed social concerns -- he was often left out of play because friends had peanut butter in the house. He took his own food to parties and was taught not to share. It was just too dangerous.

When he started kindergarten in 1999, there were no allergy policies or any true understanding of the condition. The kindergarten teacher kept giving him candy rewards until one day, my fearful rebuke for this kindly habit finally sunk in. She turned white. Given this general lack of understanding at the schools at this time, I refused to let him attend many field trips envisioning him trapped on a bus with a peanut butter sandwich. I laminated home-made posters with his allergy profile and a photo -- two for the classroom, and more for the staffroom and the main office. I insisted that his class be peanut free. Every morning we strapped an Epi-belt containing two pens around his waist.

I couldn’t help but wonder if I was shadow-boxing my own paranoia, and not surprisingly I was accused of going overboard. But, as it turned out, I wasn't the only mother dealing with this problem in exactly the same way. A steady increase of peanut allergic children and concerned parents joined school communities across the province, the country. Lunch bag inspections became common. Any peanut related food, granola bar or sandwich was confiscated and sent home with a cautionary note. Initially, parents insisted that the peanut butter ban had violated their rights. Soon, however, everyone was forced to accommodate this new generation of allergic children. There were just too many of them.

At this point, at last, I started to think. What was going on? This allergy had developed in hundreds of thousands of children, not just mine – it had grown from an infrequent occurrence in 1990 to 1.5% of the US population, 4.5 million people by 2009. Neither coincidence nor genetic fluke could explain these numbers.

I started to dig. I wondered if the epidemic had grown from some unfortunate but perfect constellation of conditions and events. And in these circumstances, perhaps I too played a part.

My inquiries became the first book on the History of the Peanut Allergy Epidemic.

Biography

Heather Fraser, MA, BA, B.Ed is a Toronto-based writer. In addition to studies in alternative medicine, she has two university degrees in history and a third in education.

Monday, March 22, 2010 @ 3:07 pm   4839 Views   MamaCow   Like
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Guest Speaker:
Dr. Drew Bird, The Food Allergy Center at Children’s
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Dedman Family Scholar in Clinical Care
Division of Allergy and Immunology
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
www.childrens.com

Thursday, November 19, 2009
11:00 am - 12:30 pm

RSVP:  http://intheloopkids.com/?cat=454

Wednesday, November 11, 2009 @ 12:02 pm   4666 Views   MamaCow   Like
1
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Children’s Medical Center recently announced Dr. Drew Bird as head of The Food Allergy Center at Children’s. Dr. Bird completed a post-graduate clinical research fellowship in food allergy at Duke University Medical Center focusing on food desensitization

Wednesday, November 11, 2009 @ 11:57 am   4733 Views   MamaCow   Like
1
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Monday, October 12, 2009 @ 4:44 pm   5045 Views   MamaCow   Like
1
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This is an amazing little boy...

Monday, October 12, 2009 @ 4:32 pm   4983 Views   MamaCow   Like
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Note:  This is my note to the Nut Free Allergy Mom
I have removed her site from our site so feel free to visit her direct.  You can see her note to me there by following this link:  http://nut-freemom.blogspot.com/2009/07/holy-cow-website-is-taking-my-content.html
Dear Jenny:
 
I read your post regarding Holy Cow.  As a mother of a child with a life threatening allergy to milk, I have built a website that pulls in RSS feeds of other sites for those of us following news and blogs in the allergy world.  This is a free service and I don't pull in the full content, only the title of the article with a brief summary or the first 250 words.  The concept is for persons, visiting Holy Cow, to click on the article and it takes them directly to the original content.
 
It is very similar to a feed reader except that persons can subscribe and article titles can be viewed in their Inbox.  Again, once an article is clicked on, the reader is taken directly to the original site hosting the content.  I am only providing a link and a brief description.  The goal is to get people to your site and to your information.   
 
Regarding your site, the RSS feed (the orange symbol) is created by your site for use in feed readers and similar applications. 
 
I have generally found that bloggers in the allergy community are very open to sharing information and tips, to try to prevent the needless death of a child. 
 
I have removed your RSS feed from our site.
 
Sincerely,
 
 
Saffie Leedy Farris
Thursday, July 30, 2009 @ 9:10 pm   5097 Views   MamaCow   Like
1
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Hello.  I am the mother of an 19 month old who is allergic to eggs and milk.  We will retest her just before her 2nd birthday.  I am hopeful that she will outgrow at least one of her allergies, but until then we just do the best we can.  I currently write the blog www.milkandeggallergykid.blogspot.com where I share recipes and personal experience tidbits.

Friday, July 17, 2009 @ 9:29 am   4891 Views   foodallergywoes   Like
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I am considering ramping up Holy Cow Talk...  My thought is to create a Discussion Forum for food allergy families.  My expertise is with the Milk Free Lifestyle and I know I can be of great help to younger families.  Myself, I need support with the teenage years...

Here is what I need help with...  I can build it..  but I need to get advice on how we want it?  Do you want one general discussion, with topics pertaining to our allergies...  or does each type of allergy... want their own group...

Let me know..  I can build it...  Would love suggestions..

Friday, June 26, 2009 @ 8:52 am   6161 Views   MamaCow   Like
2
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If you know of anyone with a food allergy to milk, please tell them about this site.  As a mom, who has a child with a milk allergy, I would like to have a place for those of us in this situation to share our knowledge, tips and support.

As a member, you can invite people but clicking on the Invite button on the Top Right...

Monday, June 22, 2009 @ 11:52 pm   4787 Views   MamaCow   Like
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