Nut Allergy Early Boarding
#16
Join Date: Oct 2017
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Doubt they are keeping it hidden. Passengers needing special assistance covers a lot.
Would you expect them to announce the reason each person needs extra time. Oh... they could do it as they are boarding like a talent show.... and miss Betty had a hip replacement last month at the young age of 83, George here is almost blind but still attractes the ladies and Jack has a peanut allergy.
Sorry, people are saying the thread will be closed, I thought I better get a laugh in first.
I for one am just glad there aren't nuts in the Delta cookies, so I can have those regardless of the flight being nut free.
Would you expect them to announce the reason each person needs extra time. Oh... they could do it as they are boarding like a talent show.... and miss Betty had a hip replacement last month at the young age of 83, George here is almost blind but still attractes the ladies and Jack has a peanut allergy.
Sorry, people are saying the thread will be closed, I thought I better get a laugh in first.
I for one am just glad there aren't nuts in the Delta cookies, so I can have those regardless of the flight being nut free.
#17
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In a past life, an employee of mine had a severe peanut allergy (as in, she would die). When I traveled with her she would be afforded early boarding to wipe/clean the seat before sitting down. Obviously they also wouldn't serve peanuts on flights that she was on. She informed Delta of her allergy in the special assistance section that you probably skip right over when you book a ticket (I know I do).
#18
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: ATL
Programs: DL DM, UA Plat, HH
Posts: 103
My daughter has a severe nut allergy and she and my wife have been pre-boarding for years to wipe down the seat and tray table. We are appreciative of their accommodation although have encountered a few rolled eyes. I probably wouldn’t understand it as well either if it wasn’t my daughter, but the risk is real and those with children in this situation hear tragic stories all too often.
When you look at it like a 6 year old - she views what could be on her seat as cyanide. She know it won’t kill her on contact, but I bet you’d wipe it off the tray table before you ate.
When you look at it like a 6 year old - she views what could be on her seat as cyanide. She know it won’t kill her on contact, but I bet you’d wipe it off the tray table before you ate.
#19
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I am not trying to be rude at all, but what did everyone do before this was allowed? Stay home?
I once flew BS on WN, and was A-1, the guy standing in front of me was going to board early with his son to wipe the seats down. On southwest, the airline known universally for peanuts. He said his kid was deathly allergic. I asked why southwest? He said it was cheaper.....
all I could think of was Darwin.
I once flew BS on WN, and was A-1, the guy standing in front of me was going to board early with his son to wipe the seats down. On southwest, the airline known universally for peanuts. He said his kid was deathly allergic. I asked why southwest? He said it was cheaper.....
all I could think of was Darwin.
#20
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: ATL
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It’s not rude, just ignorant.
Almost every action carries a personal risk calculation. Everyone’s threshold is different. Do you put a seatbelt on always? Drive a car in the pouring rain? Skip a flu shot? Go inside when lighting is in the area? All odds. Life experience makes out threshold different even though odds may the same. Flying with allergy is the same. Makes people feel better with the increased perceived odds to do something. The perceived decreases odds of reaction by wiping the seat is their choice. So is the known increased odds of flying southwest. I don’t and won’t with my daughter. Don’t judge.
Almost every action carries a personal risk calculation. Everyone’s threshold is different. Do you put a seatbelt on always? Drive a car in the pouring rain? Skip a flu shot? Go inside when lighting is in the area? All odds. Life experience makes out threshold different even though odds may the same. Flying with allergy is the same. Makes people feel better with the increased perceived odds to do something. The perceived decreases odds of reaction by wiping the seat is their choice. So is the known increased odds of flying southwest. I don’t and won’t with my daughter. Don’t judge.
I am not trying to be rude at all, but what did everyone do before this was allowed? Stay home?
I once flew BS on WN, and was A-1, the guy standing in front of me was going to board early with his son to wipe the seats down. On southwest, the airline known universally for peanuts. He said his kid was deathly allergic. I asked why southwest? He said it was cheaper.....
all I could think of was Darwin.
I once flew BS on WN, and was A-1, the guy standing in front of me was going to board early with his son to wipe the seats down. On southwest, the airline known universally for peanuts. He said his kid was deathly allergic. I asked why southwest? He said it was cheaper.....
all I could think of was Darwin.
#22
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Join Date: Jun 2004
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I am not trying to be rude at all, but what did everyone do before this was allowed? Stay home?
I once flew BS on WN, and was A-1, the guy standing in front of me was going to board early with his son to wipe the seats down. On southwest, the airline known universally for peanuts. He said his kid was deathly allergic. I asked why southwest? He said it was cheaper.....
all I could think of was Darwin.
I once flew BS on WN, and was A-1, the guy standing in front of me was going to board early with his son to wipe the seats down. On southwest, the airline known universally for peanuts. He said his kid was deathly allergic. I asked why southwest? He said it was cheaper.....
all I could think of was Darwin.
#23
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I am actually asking a serious question in that how does DL handle this? As i said originally I have never seen anyone but wheelchairs and strollers go in pre board, and on the DL site you can check you have a nut allergy during booking. Has anyone ever seen anyone not with a stroller/wheelchair pre board that MIGHT be cleaning their seat? It says DL was first but it seems like DL has kept this pretty hidden.
#24
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https://patient.info/health/food-all...ce/nut-allergy
thought this link may help educate some people on the thread.
All the humour aside, I’ve seen my daughter hospitalised through her peanut allergy - and its not something I’d wish on anyone. The furor around this is incredible in my opinion. Bottom line, we all know people can die from this. Can we not be a little more tolerant - I can assure you, no-one with a peanut allergy is happy to have it - early boarding or not ...
thought this link may help educate some people on the thread.
All the humour aside, I’ve seen my daughter hospitalised through her peanut allergy - and its not something I’d wish on anyone. The furor around this is incredible in my opinion. Bottom line, we all know people can die from this. Can we not be a little more tolerant - I can assure you, no-one with a peanut allergy is happy to have it - early boarding or not ...
#25
Join Date: Jan 2008
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Peanut allergies are triggered by the proteins found on the peanuts. These proteins do not persist in the air in quantities sufficient to trigger a reaction. A person must generally physically touch peanuts or peanut dust to have a realistic chance of having a reaction. A plane is no worse or better than a train in that regard. Risk is minimal unless a person is physically co-located to the peanut consumption in question.
The risk is just a high - if not higher - that a passenger on a previous plane had peanuts and left peanut reside at the person's seat (this is the idea behind wiping down the tray table).
No one will have a reaction from someone eating peanuts a few rows ahead or behind them.
The risk is just a high - if not higher - that a passenger on a previous plane had peanuts and left peanut reside at the person's seat (this is the idea behind wiping down the tray table).
No one will have a reaction from someone eating peanuts a few rows ahead or behind them.
Lastly, how would I recognize the reaction (supposing I'm nearby) and what could I do to help?
#26
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It’s not rude, just ignorant.
Almost every action carries a personal risk calculation. Everyone’s threshold is different. Do you put a seatbelt on always? Drive a car in the pouring rain? Skip a flu shot? Go inside when lighting is in the area? All odds. Life experience makes out threshold different even though odds may the same. Flying with allergy is the same. Makes people feel better with the increased perceived odds to do something. The perceived decreases odds of reaction by wiping the seat is their choice. So is the known increased odds of flying southwest. I don’t and won’t with my daughter. Don’t judge.
Almost every action carries a personal risk calculation. Everyone’s threshold is different. Do you put a seatbelt on always? Drive a car in the pouring rain? Skip a flu shot? Go inside when lighting is in the area? All odds. Life experience makes out threshold different even though odds may the same. Flying with allergy is the same. Makes people feel better with the increased perceived odds to do something. The perceived decreases odds of reaction by wiping the seat is their choice. So is the known increased odds of flying southwest. I don’t and won’t with my daughter. Don’t judge.
I avoid the places or try to restrict where I go. But that’s just me. I exhibit personal responsibility, and try not to burden others with my personal poor choices.
But hey, I guess that make me ignorant.
#27
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I have food allergies to where I carry epi-pens. Not to peanuts. If it was, I sure as hell would not fly southwest. I refer it to as personal responsibility that no one really wants to do it anymore. Fly an airline like Delta or one not know for flying you for peanuts!
I'm curious, do you feel people in wheelchairs should exhibit personal responsibility and just avoid inaccessible public places, so that building owners don't have to be burdened with building ramps and elevators?
Ah, so you chose to have food allergies that require you to carry epi-pens? I'm sure I'm not the only one intrigued to hear the details behind that story.
#28
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https://patient.info/health/food-all...ce/nut-allergy
thought this link may help educate some people on the thread.
All the humour aside, I’ve seen my daughter hospitalised through her peanut allergy - and its not something I’d wish on anyone. The furor around this is incredible in my opinion. Bottom line, we all know people can die from this. Can we not be a little more tolerant - I can assure you, no-one with a peanut allergy is happy to have it - early boarding or not ...
thought this link may help educate some people on the thread.
All the humour aside, I’ve seen my daughter hospitalised through her peanut allergy - and its not something I’d wish on anyone. The furor around this is incredible in my opinion. Bottom line, we all know people can die from this. Can we not be a little more tolerant - I can assure you, no-one with a peanut allergy is happy to have it - early boarding or not ...
#29
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This gets to an interesting point of law in the Air Carrier Access Act: carriers can't require advance notice of disability (with exceptions for providing some services, like oxygen). If Delta is moving to treat peanut allergies as a disability there will be specific legal obligations.
#30
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The point your missing is don’t fly the airline known for peanuts! Cough up a couple extra bucks and avoid that airline.
But it if you choose not to avoid certain things, that can easily be avoided, then it’s Darwinism. FFS
But it if you choose not to avoid certain things, that can easily be avoided, then it’s Darwinism. FFS