Doctors recommend early exposure to prevent peanut allergies
LINDSEY TANNER/AP medical writer | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 10 years, 3 months AGO
CHICAGO - A pediatricians group is recommending that infants at high risk of peanut allergies be given foods containing peanuts before they turn 1.
The interim guidance is in response to a major allergy study published earlier this year that found that exposure to peanuts in infancy seemed to help build tolerance - contrary to conventional thinking.
Baby-suitable foods used in the study included smooth peanut butter, peanut soup and finely ground peanuts mixed into yogurt and other foods.
The advice comes in a consensus statement that the American Academy of Pediatrics helped prepare and endorsed in June along with the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology and several foreign allergy groups.
The academy is releasing the statement online Monday in the journal Pediatrics.
Allergy tests are recommended before exposing at-risk infants to peanut-containing foods between 4 months and 11 months of age.
These are youngsters who've had skin reactions to eating eggs or a severe eczema skin rash, which suggests a possible food allergy.
The recommendations are meant to serve as interim guidance while more extensive guidelines are prepared by the National Institute of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology and the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. Those are expected by next year, the consensus statement said.
ARTICLES BY LINDSEY TANNER/AP MEDICAL WRITER
Weight Watchers, Jenny Craig get best marks in diet review
CHICAGO - Trying to slim down? Weight Watchers and Jenny Craig scored the best marks for effectiveness in a review of research on commercial diet programs, but many other plans just haven't been studied enough to evaluate long-term results.
Aging MDs prompt call forcompetency tests at AMA meeting
No mandatory retirement age for doctors
CHICAGO - With one of four U.S. doctors older than 65, the American Medical Association adopted a plan Monday to help decide when it's time for aging senior physicians to hang up the stethoscope.
Parents increasingly ask doctors to delay vaccines
CHICAGO - Parents have increasingly pressured doctors to delay vaccines for young children, making their kids and others vulnerable to preventable diseases, a study suggests.