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Sesame allergy moms sound off about shortcuts on FDA guidelines: 'Threatening the lives of our kids'

A Chicago mom and a D.C. mom weighed in with thoughts on how some companies are taking "scary" shortcuts around the FDA's requirement on clear labeling of sesame on food products.

The sesame-allergic community isn’t happy that some food brands and manufacturers are creating "workarounds" when it comes to sesame as a product ingredient.

The FDA officially named sesame the ninth major food allergen in the U.S. effective Jan. 1. The industry was expected to comply with new guidelines that called for clear labeling on products.

Instead of spending the time and money to ensure that manufacturing lines were sesame-clean if sesame wasn't a listed ingredient, some brands and food makers opted instead to add more sesame to their items.

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This not only gives those who are sesame-allergic fewer food options, say concerned parents — it poses a growing threat, as companies appear to be refusing to prioritize the customers who suffer from the potentially life-threatening allergy.

A Chicago mom of two, Beverly (who asked for her last name to be withheld), told Fox News Digital in an interview that these workarounds to the new law are more than personal.

Her son struggles with a severe allergy to sesame.

"Allergy moms can’t get the word out fast enough that these companies are threatening the lives of our kids," she said. 

The decision these companies are making to add more sesame is "not in the spirit" of the FASTER Act, said Beverly. 

The 2021 Food Allergy Safety, Treatment, Education and Research (FASTER) Act was meant to help "keep people with allergies safe," she added. 

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"What if companies started putting poison in your food that could possibly kill your children? You would feel attacked. You would feel scared," she said.

"And that's how we're feeling," she continued. 

"We're feeling scared. We're feeling frightened. We're feeling hurt that companies are doing this just to keep their costs down."

Erin Malawer, executive director of AllergyStrong, an allergy advocacy group in Washington, D.C., told Fox News Digital that many families are feeling "betrayed" by brands they trusted. 

"If this were peanuts and this was happening, everyone would be outraged," said Malawer, who is also the mother of a son with a sesame allergy.

"So, the fact that we're adding sesame and quietly … [and that] no one cares is really frustrating," she added. 

"We’d like to see the FDA do more."

Both of the women's families stay completely away from sesame in order to ensure that their sons remain safe.

Beverly described navigating the allergy as "very tricky." 

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She said her family has been working around the allergy ever since her son’s diagnosis at six months old.

This includes calling restaurants and food companies ahead of time, said the mom, to confirm that there are no traces of sesame in their products.

And now that some menus are changing to include more sesame in food items, Beverly explained that parents must be extra careful — and start the screening process all over again.

"We were very excited to give [our son] new foods that before were too vague [in terms of ingredients] to give him," said the mom. "We were excited that we would have a yes or no answer."

She added, "You can imagine how devastated we were when the companies started working around the FASTER Act, which was meant to help families like mine … adding the allergen that is life-threatening to so many people just to bypass a health regulation."

She also said, "So now we're finding foods that were traditionally safe for our family we can no longer have."

Fox News Digital reached out to the FDA for comment in light of consumer concern over adding sesame to products.

In an earlier statement, the agency said that it "does not support" the workaround by certain brands, but that these brands are technically not disobeying the law, it told Fox News Digital. 

Malawer agreed that the amount of reeducation it will require for people to stay safe is "enormous."

Sesame oil, paste and flour are "much more allergenic" than whole sesame seeds — and these ingredients don’t improve the quality or taste of products, she said.

"They're adding a more potent version of it to their products, not just adding sesame," she said. 

"Meaning that accidental exposure, which is likely to happen, could very realistically trigger a reaction."

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The incorporation of sesame flour into bread and sesame oil in other recipes has "greatly limited" her family’s ability to eat out, said Beverly.

"Our family's almost in a lockdown mode where we're not even trying to eat out right now until everything is kind of settled," she said.

"The questions are just too complicated sometimes for people that are working a register," she also said.

Beverly of Chicago belongs to an online sesame community. She said people are posting about "more and more" products or brands every day that were previously safe for those who are allergic — but now contain sesame.

Restaurant chains such as Domino’s, for example, now list sesame as an ingredient in all of its pizzas.

Beverly mentioned that Pirate’s Booty, once one of her son’s favorite snacks, is now labeled that it may contain sesame, too.

Fox News Digital reached out to Domino's corporate headquarters and to the manufacturer of Pirate's Booty, The Hershey Company, for comment.

And though there may be no change to the recipe, Beverly suggested these companies only claim their products contain sesame to "protect themselves from liability."

Malawer confirmed that many of her constituents nationwide have also been having issues finding "any" sliced bread or buns that are safe. 

"And that is exactly opposite of what this law was intended to do," she said.

Malawer said it feels wrong to her for companies to make decisions for families by changing recipes and adding sesame — instead of having clear labels that indicate a food item was made on equipment that may contain traces of sesame.

"As soon as you add sesame, you've made the decision that it's not safe for me anymore," she said. 

"Something doesn't feel right about that."

She added, "It's not in their customers' best interest and, these days, that just doesn't fly anymore."

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Malawer encouraged the FDA to clarify compliance with new guidelines since the interpretation and response have differed from brand to brand.

"Until the FDA comes out to clarify this, I just think that we're stuck," she said.

As the mother of a 17-year-old boy who suffers from multiple food allergies, Malawer said an allergy diagnosis of any kind "upends your world."

Even as an allergy professional, the mom said she learns something new about the condition "every day."

"You have to keep yourself safe as much physically as you do psychologically," she said. 

"And that is also, as a parent, really, really tough because it's a really big burden."

Malawer described one instance when her son had an accidental exposure to sesame oil as "simply awful."

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"When you see your child turning blue, gasping for air, you see the power of a very small amount of allergen," she said.

"If [my son] could trade one allergy out, he would tell you every time sesame because people don’t understand it."

Beverly’s son, who’s now three years old, had his first severe reaction after eating tahini.

The doctors told Beverly that a second exposure could be life-threatening.

"It is a very severe reaction and that's why this is so scary," she said.

Allergist and immunologist Dr. Purvi Parikh of New York explained just how scary an allergic reaction to sesame can be in a phone call with Fox News Digital.

"We've been seeing the increase in sesame allergy over the last few years, if not decades," Parikh said. 

"And it's often a subtle allergen that many people may not realize can be life-threatening."

Parikh encouraged the sesame-allergic community to "really advocate" for themselves and speak out as ingredients shift under these new parameters.

The allergist also recommended that people always carry emergency medicine, including two EpiPens or other epinephrine devices.

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"Nothing bad can happen from using an EpiPen," she said. 

"The medicine is so short-lived, it's out of your system within 10 minutes, 30 minutes." 

"So even if you're in doubt, it's actually much safer to use it than not to use it … because epinephrine is the only thing that can stop a reaction dead in its tracks."

Patients should consider nailing down an emergency action plan with their doctor, she added, detailing what to do and how to recognize an allergic reaction.

Parikh shared that an allergic reaction, or anaphylaxis, can best be indicated with skin symptoms accompanied by another bodily reaction.

This can include skin itching, swelling or redness in addition to trouble breathing, wheezing, stomach cramping, nausea, dizziness and other symptoms, she said.

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