‘Natasha’s Law’ – a group response

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Earlier this year, the Food Standards Agency and Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (Defra) announced a public consultation on proposed changes to the allergen labelling laws in the wake of the tragic death of Natasha Ednan-Laperouse. Printed below is a group response submitted to that consultation and signed by more than 200 members of the allergy community.

A little background: the consultation relates only to so-called ‘PPDS’ establishments – Pre-Packed for Direct Sale. This doesn’t have a completely clear-cut definition but basically means anywhere that makes and packages items ready for sale on the premises.

That includes sandwiches packed on-site and taken by the consumer from a chiller cabinet; salads displayed in deli boxes behind a counter and bought to take away by the consumer; takeaway items collected by the consumer if displayed in packaging on-site (e.g. chicken in a box; wrapped burgers). This may also include supermarket foods such as deli counter boxed salads, weighed and packaged cheeses; fresh (uncooked) pizzas from the deli counter; baked goods from a bakery counter.

It doesn’t include foods that are ordered by the customer, prepared freshly and then wrapped or packaged to be taken away; or foods that are prepared in advance of a rush, displayed on the counter but not wrapped until they are bought by the consumer (e.g. a pile of filled bagels in a cafe).

Anyway, here goes (warning: it’s long)… *deep breath*:

Allergen Labelling Review Team
Defra
Room 202, Zone 2
1-2 Peasholme Green
York
YO1 7PX                                                                                                28 March 2019

Group Response to Allergen Labelling Review

Dear Sir/Madam

I am writing as the informal representative of a group of 208 individuals who have come together under the banner of the Twitter allergy community @allergyhour to respond collectively to the DEFRA Allergen Labelling Review.

Continue reading “‘Natasha’s Law’ – a group response”

Allergy Labelling – the new laws is a comin’

coffee-and-cake-pairing_emag_article_largeA YEAR or so back, I ambled along to our local park cafe – newly refurbed, ponced-up and handed to a big name London catering firm – and fancied buying myself a coffee and a cake.

Unable to eat nuts around Sidney, I asked the girl on the counter if she could tell me please what was in the carrot cake; might it contain any nuts, or nut flours? She trotted off to ask the chef. Minutes later, the reply came back: “The chef can’t tell you what’s in the cake. His recipes are secret.”

Needless to say that particular ‘chef’ was a twat, but it’s heartening to know that as of tomorrow this kind of response will be flat-out illegal. It probably always was a bit dodgy but the guidelines are now absolutely crystal clear.

The new regulations

Under the new EU Regulation 1169/2011 – aka the new EU Food Information for Consumers Regulation (FIR) – any catering business will have to have full and correct information on the 14 major allergens contained within its products.

The 14 major allergens are:

  • Cereals containing gluten (eg wheat, spelt, barley, rye and oats)
  • Crustaceans such as prawns, crabs, lobster and crayfish
  • Eggs
  • Fish
  • Peanuts
  • Soybeans
  • Milk
  • Nuts (almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts, pecan nuts, brazil nuts, pistachio, cashew, macadamia or queensland nuts)
  • Celery
  • Mustard
  • Sesame
  • Sulphur dioxide or sulphites (often found in dried fruit and wine)
  • Lupin
  • Molluscs like clams, scallops, squid, mussels, oysters and snails

The good bits

Now, I have my reservations about the new laws for various reasons but the good things, as far as I can see, are as follows:

* If you walk into any catering establishment and ask what allergens any of its foods or dishes contain, they have to be able to tell you. They can tell you verbally, or have the information written down, but there must be clear signposting to advise you how you can get this information from staff.

* Nobody can say ‘er, I dunno’ or ‘I’m so up my own ass about my bog standard scone recipe that I can’t tell you what’s in it’. They have to tell you if the food contains any of the 14 major allergens. They have to be accurate. If they are not, you can report them to the food environmental health team of your local authority or the Food Standards Agency.

* It means that every catering establishment will have to have at least this rudimentary understanding of the notion of allergens and what the biggies are. That’s a first step in the right direction.

* Every restaurant will have to list ALL of the most common allergens. I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve tried to find out if a dish contains sesame (I’m thinking chains such as ASK, or Zizzi) and hit a blank.

Pre-packed food labels will change

The new laws also cover pre-packed foods, such as those sold in supermarkets. These foods will have to have the major 14 allergens clearly highlighted within the ingredients list (for example in bold). Be warned – it means the end of the old allergen ‘box’, stating ‘Contains: milk, eggs, whatnot’. We will no longer have this shorthand and will have to scrutinise the ingredients list to check for allergens. Bear in mind, too, that this information will be phased in, as some foods with a long shelf life will still not have switched over to the new-style labelling.

This is the old way, courtesy of M&S:

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This is the new (courtesy of M&S and beauty, allergy and eczema blogger Sugarpuffish):

food label

There are some very complicated and disputed bits to this law, which I won’t go into here but which ‘Health Journo’ and Coeliac expert Alex Gazzola covers brilliantly in his blog. It isn’t quite as straightforward as it sounds, and manufacturers – even the biggies – are still getting this wrong.

The less good bits

BUT.

Despite claims that this will revolutionise the way we eat out and shop as allergic consumers, I still have massive reservations. These include:

* It is still not compulsory for caterers to learn about allergen control and cross contamination. Without this becoming an obligatory part of basic hygiene certification (i.e. without chefs and caterers having to pass a module in how to guard against contamination) I don’t have huge confidence that the vast majority of outlets will be able to safely cater. They will be:

(a) scared, where they actually don’t need to be – catering for allergies is not a dark art, but many are petrified of the consequences because they don’t understand what simple steps they can take

(b) confused about what constitutes cross contamination (I once had a manager in a John Lewis cafe tell me their food was unsafe because there were nuts stored in an adjacent room. Possibly they were flying nuts but you’d think she would have mentioned it…)

(c) in some cases not shit-giving enough to do anything but the absolute minimum – i.e. list the allergens but not try to cater for the allergic.

* There is nothing to legislate for the bane of our lives – ‘may contain’ labelling. There are Food Standards Agency guidelines that note there should be “significant and demonstrable risk” for a product to bear the warning ‘may contain nuts’ or ‘sesame’ or x allergen. But there is no law to govern this, therefore it is still perfectly possible (if inadvisable) for a food manufacturer or supplier to state ‘may contain nuts’ etc where no genuine risk of cross contamination exists.

The divs

There are some amazingly wonderful people out there who go the extra mile to cater for allergy (and I’ll be posting about those that we have found, very soon), but there are also some divs out there huffing and puffing about the ‘extra admin’. I’m thinking of Stuart Atkinson, ‘VP’ of the National Federation of Fish Friers, whose empathy at the end of this Guardian report is heart-warming. As he puts it:

“This is yet another administrative burden placed on small businesses… Once all the interest in the new regulations dies down, we are still stuck with them.”

Yes, it’s sort of the point that the regulations last longer than a fortnight.

“Constant vigilance will be required on receipt of deliveries in case a supplier has altered a pie recipe, for example.There is no requirement for fish friers to be directly informed of any changes to the ingredients of the products we buy, other than the list of ingredients on the packaging. We must therefore check every delivery for any changes to this list.”

Welcome to our world.

Stuff worth remembering

Some other points to bear in mind:

* Unless they are a registered food business, charity cake sales and voluntary bake events are exempt. The Food Standards Agency’s Technical Guidance Notes here state that: “Individuals who are not food businesses and occasionally provide food at charity events or voluntary cake sales, for example, do not need to follow these requirements.”

* The new regulations are NOT a substitute for asking all the questions you should usually ask. Don’t assume that you can walk into any restaurant or cafe and eat safely if your allergen isn’t listed as an ingredient. Talk to the manager and, ideally, the chef. Explain your allergy/allergies and that you need your food to be prepared away from those allergens, and can’t eat food that ‘may contain’ any of the allergens. Explain the severity of your allergy. This checklist from the Anaphylaxis Campaign is helpful.

The responsibility is ours

At the end of the day, much of the responsibility still – rightly – lies with us as allergic consumers. It is down to us to explain what we need, clearly and fully, and down to us to help to educate others out there about how they can best cater for us safely.

So I’ll be viewing the new regulations with a healthy suspicion: as a good first step but far from perfect. I’ll be quick to praise and thank those who get on top of the new regulations and go the extra mile to cater for us, and I’ll be bracing myself to do the other with those that don’t.

As fellow allergy blogger @allergymumscouk put it on Twitter: “What’s the saying? ‘Walk quietly but carry a big stick'”.

Batons at the ready…

Mf_cavewoman

 

Extra resources: The Food Standards Agency’s advice to consumers leaflet is here, and its guidance for small and medium food businesses on the requirements for loose foods is here

 

 

 

Risk it for a biscuit?

I have a dilemma.

I know most ‘may contain’ food labelling is about arse-covering more than anything else, but do we let our nut, egg and sesame allergic Sidney eat pre-packaged foods that, on the face of it, are fine to eat, but contain the rotten little addendum: “Produced in a factory that handles egg, nuts and seeds”?

Our doctor, who we like very much because he’s sensible yet sunny, says those ‘may contain’ goods are most likely fine to eat if they’re from a major manufacturer or a household name supermarket. But, as he puts it, it depends on how risk averse you are.

I’d like not to be risk averse. I don’t want Sidney to go through life fearing travel, or eating out, or even eating in. I don’t want to deny him foods that would actually be fine to eat out of some vague sense of panic and because the brand’s lawyers said ‘stick that on there just in case someone sues’.

Today at Sainsbury’s I hovered over the baby snacks aisle, and two packs I hadn’t seen before: Plum’s ‘Strawberry Oaty Chomps’ and Ella’s Kitchen ‘Strawberries & Apples Nibbly Fingers’.

At the moment, his only between-meal snacks are fresh fruit, rice cakes, those full of air sweetcorn puff things and yoghurt. It would be lovely to let him have something different and these new bars seem all good: fruit, oats, quinoa…

But they are both produced in the bloody factory that also produces nuts blah blah. I have to confess, it annoys the hell out of me. The foods they make for younger babies have no such warnings; I assume it’s because controls are far stricter for the under-1s and that, once they’re past 12 months, it gets more of a faff, and more expensive, for the manufacturers to continue to be so rigorous.

So I hovered, and I picked them up, and I bought them, and now they’re sitting in our special allergy drawer in the kitchen (yes, we have one). But I’m too nervous to let him eat them. Yet.

What would you do?

If Meat is Murder what about bananas?

Why the Government needs to lay down the law

WHEN I was 12 (and much to my parents’ dismay) I turned vegetarian. It was 1985 and the veggie brigade’s brigadier generals were Morrissey, those crazy anti-vivisectionist kids, Linda McCartney (pre sausage fame) and, I suppose, the Dalai Lama.

There were no veggie food aisles, M&S was a good year or so away from launching its first vegetarian ready meals and Quorn wouldn’t hit the supermarkets until 1994.

When I went out and asked for a veggie option, I’d get pizza with holes in the topping where the pepperoni used to be. On one school trip I remember being served a plate of boiled peas and a potato as my classmates tucked into roast chicken with all the sides.

Anyway, that’s what I’m reminded of now as we navigate the path of food allergy with our son. I’m not being trite – clearly I know my vegetarianism is a lifestyle choice, not a life-threatening situation. But perhaps that’s my point: isn’t it so much more important that we get on top of this food allergy issue as soon as we can?

Yes, things are much improved today compared to just a few years ago: allergen labelling legislation only came into effect in Britain in 2004 and EU-wide one year later. But, with food allergies on the increase (up to eight per cent of children and four per cent of adults in the UK, compared to the three per cent of the population calling themselves vegetarian) we’ve a long way to go.

Last week was Food Allergy & Intolerance Week, and Allergy UK has called for all food outlets to list allergens on their menu, and for staff to receive compulsory training on issues such as cross contamination.

As the charity’s deputy chief executive Lindsay McManus told Big Hospitality: “Unfortunately there is currently no legislation for restaurants, or the hospitality industry in general when it comes to listing allergens on menus. It is down to the individual outlet. The Food Standards Agency offers a comprehensive online training module that restaurant staff can access… but this is not enforced.”

Well, now is the time to enforce it: an EU regulation on food information was passed by the European Commission last autumn, including the requirement that allergen info be extended to non prepacked foods. It comes into force in December 2014 but how each country will implement it has yet to be decided: for instance, it’s not specified whether the information will be displayed or have to be specially requested.

The last thing we want is a repeat of the current mess of allergen labelling, where many manufacturers simply cover their backs by adding the wormy proviso “may contain traces of x” instead of ensuring cross contamination simply does not happen.

It really isn’t such a radical move: nutritional info on packaging, which we barely blink at these days, has only been around since 1996. But as parent to a food allergic child I dream of the day when every food outlet – whether restaurant, deli or ice cream van – has to display clear and precise details of ingredients and potential contamination as well.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not surprised most people couldn’t give a stuff. I don’t believe I gave food allergy a second thought before baby turned out to have a string of the things. But when you find yourself out shopping for the ingredients for a simple homecooked dinner and can’t pick up a tub of white pepper, a box of cornflour or a packet of porridge without reading the words “May contain nuts” you’ll know what I mean. Meals out and holidays are a minefield.

The vital thing is for all hospitality staff to be properly trained, in the same way that hygiene standards are enforced. Statutory guidelines have got to be a good thing all round: the evidence suggests that most allergic reactions occur in response to non prepacked foods, and what restaurant or café wants to have caused anaphylaxis in a diner?

Simple things would make the lives of families such as ours so much easier, and hopefully less fraught with risk every time we go out. It sounds ludicrous but I’d love to take Sid to the cafe in the park and order him a baked potato without fear that the knife used to cut it open had previously been used to spread peanut butter, or slice a sesame bap, and then casually wiped clean.

It would be wonderful to order him his first 99 from the ice-cream van instead of having to foist an orange juice lolly into his reluctant little fist. It would be a joy to take him to a restaurant and let him pilfer from our plates. And, oh, to be able to leave the house without the leaden weight of tupperware packed with pre-made meals and snacks. And then there’s my husband’s desperate wish: to one day accompany our son out for a curry.