Teen Gets Food Allergy Bill Passed for Younger Sister - East Idaho News

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Teen Gets Food Allergy Bill Passed for Younger Sister

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ht danielle mongeau jef 130319 wg?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1363787365316Danielle Mongeau pictured left. (Carter Photography)(NEW YORK) — Like most teenagers, Lauren Mongeau likes to hang out at restaurants with her friends.  The only difference is that she never eats anything.

Lauren, 16, had so many food allergies that avoiding them in Rhode Island restaurants was nearly impossible, so she stopped eating out altogether.  Even trace amounts of eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, beef, lamb, bananas, sesame seeds and mustard could trigger a life-threatening allergic reaction called anaphylaxis, and send her straight to the hospital.

“She usually chooses not to eat at all,” said her older sister, Danielle Mongeau, 18.  “She still wants to be part of it because she’s in high school and just wants to be social and have a good time with her friends.  It’s a struggle that has seriously affected her life.”

So Danielle did something about it.

In December 2011, she emailed Rhode Island state Sen. Louis DiPalma and asked him to introduce a bill that would create a food allergy awareness program for restaurants similar to the program already in place in Massachusetts.  The law would require restaurants to post signs about food allergens and include menu notices to remind customers to alert their servers to any food allergies.  Restaurants would also be required to designate a food allergies manager who would undergo specific training about allergies and how to keep customers safe.

In her email to her state senator, Danielle told DiPalma that her family had gone out to eat only seven times without packing a homemade meal for Lauren.  Of those seven restaurant trips, Lauren was hospitalized for anaphylactic shock five times.

She said servers often didn’t understand the gravity of food allergies. As such, they often became “rude” when made aware of Lauren’s and Danielle’s dietary restrictions. (Danielle is allergic to tree nuts.)   Once, the Mongeau family was asked to leave a restaurant because Lauren was spotted eating food from home instead of ordering off the menu, Danielle wrote.

Of the 60,000 emails DiPalma has received in his five years as a state senator, he said only two had come from teenagers, and Danielle’s grabbed his attention.

“She’s a phenomenal individual,” DiPalma told ABC News.  “We didn’t need to reinvent what’s already good practice out there in Massachusetts, and that’s what we chose to do.”

The bill passed last year, and will take effect in July 2013.  DiPalma said 300 restaurants had already taken the allergy training course online.

The day the bill passed, Danielle went to the Rhode Island Statehouse and met the governor.  Now, Danielle, a high school senior, works there as a page.  She is still weighing which college to attend next year.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

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