Keeping Students Safe and Included -- Food Allergy Research & Education Launches New Education Program for School Staff
McLean, VA (PRWEB) February 11, 2016 -- Despite increased awareness about the severity of food allergy, serious allergic reactions continue to occur in schools nationwide. Food Allergy Research & Education (FARE) is addressing this challenge through the continued development and delivery of community education initiatives including its new “Food Allergies: Keeping Students Safe and Included” presentation, a new resource launched this week that provides clear, actionable information to schools to help them support students with food allergies. The program can be delivered by internal school staff or by a member of FARE’s Education Network, a collaborative of volunteer lay educators created to provide training to schools.
The presentation represents the latest in a series of evidenced-based, world-class education programs from FARE, the nation’s leading advocacy nonprofit dedicated to food allergy. “Food Allergies: Keeping Students Safe and Included,” the first in a new series of educational presentations, is designed to help school staff and administrators learn how to effectively work with students with food allergies and confidently respond to food allergy emergencies. Information provided in these materials aligns with the recommended plans, practices and procedures found in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Voluntary Guidelines for Managing Food Allergies in Schools and Early Care and Education Programs.
“FARE has long recognized the critical need for food allergy education in our schools,” said Scott Riccio, senior vice president of education and advocacy at FARE. “While awareness about the life-threatening nature of food allergies has improved over the years, it is clear that we are not where we need to be when it comes to food allergy knowledge and preparedness throughout our schools. The ‘Keeping Students Safe and Included’ materials and our passionate network of informed volunteers will help ensure that school staff – from teachers to bus drivers to administrators – are better equipped to care for students who rely on them to keep them safe.”
Previous studies have shown about 1 in 6 children with food allergies have experienced a reaction at school, and a survey of schools participating in EpiPen4Schools, a program offered by Mylan Specialty that provides free epinephrine auto-injectors to qualifying schools in the U.S., showed that anaphylactic reactions occurred in more than 1 in 10 schools in the 2013-14 academic year. FARE encourages parents, teachers, school nurses and administrators to take the lead in helping to educate their schools by presenting “Food Allergies: Keeping Students Safe and Included” at least annually to school staff.
Objectives of the presentation are:
- to improve understanding of food allergies and anaphylaxis,
- to identify laws that protect individuals with food allergies,
- to identify ways that school staff can create a safer and more inclusive school environment for students with food allergies and
- to learn how to plan for, recognize and respond to a food allergy reaction.
In addition to the PowerPoint presentation, other resources included in the materials include a companion guide and quiz. They may be downloaded and used by school nurses, teachers, parents and other health and safety advocates to educate schools about how to help students with food allergies stay safe, supported and included at school.
For more information about “Food Allergies: Keeping Students Safe and Included” materials as well as how to become a part of the FARE Education Network, visit http://www.foodallergy.org/education-network.
The FARE Education Network and training materials are made possible in part by an unrestricted sponsorship from Mylan Specialty L.P.
ABOUT FARE
Food Allergy Research & Education (FARE) works on behalf of the 15 million Americans with food allergies, including all those at risk for life-threatening anaphylaxis. This potentially deadly disease affects 1 in every 13 children in the U.S. – or roughly two in every classroom. FARE’s mission is to improve the quality of life and the health of individuals with food allergies, and to provide them hope through the promise of new treatments. Our work is organized around three core tenets: LIFE – support the ability of individuals with food allergies to live safe, productive lives with the respect of others through our education and advocacy initiatives; HEALTH – enhance the healthcare access of individuals with food allergies to state-of-the-art diagnosis and treatment; and HOPE – encourage and fund research in both industry and academia that promises new therapies to improve the allergic condition. For more information, please visit http://www.foodallergy.org.
Nancy Gregory, Food Allergy Research & Education (FARE), http://www.foodallergy.org, +1 703-563-3066, [email protected]
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