Dvergar wrote:
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notice that in item seven he says the student - singular, probably because in item five, the only serious threat is if the kid gets peanut traces on his hands and puts his hands in an orifice. He's not arguing that whole classrooms should have to wash hands on behalf of any one child. If that were his intent he would have so stated explicitly given the precise language used in the document as a whole.
So, in your case little billy eats his pb&j in the cafeteria and, as kids do, gets messy. He doesn't even have to get sloppy messy, all he needs is a little peanut butter or even a little oil from the peanut butter. It could be on his hands or his clothes. The little girl eats in her classroom and washes her hands. Little billy doesn't wash his hands BECAUSE MAKING HIM DO SO CLEARLY VIOLATES HIS RIGHTS. Billy transfers some of the butter/oil on his way back to his seat. The little girl inadvertently touches whatever it was billy got his butter/oil on. She then rubs her eyes, picks her nose etc, and suddenly:
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a dangerous reaction
You guys talk about common sense in politics and yet you think it's perfectly acceptable to picket a school because kids are being forced to wash their hands?
If such a scenario were realistic it would have been alluded to in the otherwise comprehensive materials and the appropriate precautions recommended. Also note that in the section about peanut butter, the author is talking about external exposure to the genuine article.
I mean, what's the probability that any given kid, peanut allergic or not, is going to get peanuts in his eyes from another student? This is where we descend into the "bubble boy" routine.
Mns wrote:
If by "we" you mean that you read the data, came to your own conclusion, and now you're reinforcing your own conclusion, then sure. I digress though because apparently the burden is on me to prove that the allergy is legitimate whereas you have the same amount of proof (read: zero) that this is all made up just for some attention.
Dvergar dug up an informative and authoritative pamphlet by an expert that explicitly addressed this issue and said the threat is unreal. The pediatrist said that external exposure to peanut butter is not a problem for those with a
SEVERE allergy. Even so, note that he says peanut butter - not secondary exposure to those who have handled peanut butter.
If the genuine article is marginal then why would we believe secondary exposure could possibly present a threat when the literature (elaborated on the Wikipedia page with citations) suggests that such fears are overblown? Why do we second-guess all this in favor of your supposition?