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The psychological impact of food allergy and food hypersensitivity in children, adolescents and their families

The psychological impact of food allergy and food hypersensitivity in children, adolescents and their families
The psychological impact of food allergy and food hypersensitivity in children, adolescents and their families
Food allergy affects 6% of children but there is no cure, and strict avoidance of index allergens along with immediate access to rescue medication is the current best management. With specialist care, morbidity from food allergy in children is generally low, and mortality is very rare. However, there is strong evidence that food allergy and food hypersensitivity has an impact on psychological distress and on the quality of life (QoL) of children and adolescents, as well as their families. Until recently, the measurement of QoL in allergic children has proved difficult because of the lack of investigative tools available. New instruments for assessing QoL in food allergic children have recently been developed and validated, which should provide further insights into the problems these children encounter and will enable us to measure the effects of interventions in patients. This review examines the published impact of food allergy on affected children, adolescents and their families. It considers influences such as gender, age, disease severity, co-existing allergies and external influences, and examines how these may impact on allergy-related QoL and psychological distress including anxiety and depression. Implications of the impact are considered alongside avenues for future research
anxiety, food allergy, quality of life, risk taking
0105-4538
933-945
Cummings, A.J.
b873a274-80d2-4b62-bcc3-29f9a2f46404
Knibb, R.C.
3842f934-1037-4969-8e22-1e13a12b6a86
King, R.M.
aad14b24-ad90-4efc-a91c-91ce27ab6c8a
Lucas, J.S.
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Cummings, A.J.
b873a274-80d2-4b62-bcc3-29f9a2f46404
Knibb, R.C.
3842f934-1037-4969-8e22-1e13a12b6a86
King, R.M.
aad14b24-ad90-4efc-a91c-91ce27ab6c8a
Lucas, J.S.
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313

Cummings, A.J., Knibb, R.C., King, R.M. and Lucas, J.S. (2010) The psychological impact of food allergy and food hypersensitivity in children, adolescents and their families. Allergy, 65 (8), 933-945. (doi:10.1111/j.1398-9995.2010.02342.x). (PMID:20180792)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Food allergy affects 6% of children but there is no cure, and strict avoidance of index allergens along with immediate access to rescue medication is the current best management. With specialist care, morbidity from food allergy in children is generally low, and mortality is very rare. However, there is strong evidence that food allergy and food hypersensitivity has an impact on psychological distress and on the quality of life (QoL) of children and adolescents, as well as their families. Until recently, the measurement of QoL in allergic children has proved difficult because of the lack of investigative tools available. New instruments for assessing QoL in food allergic children have recently been developed and validated, which should provide further insights into the problems these children encounter and will enable us to measure the effects of interventions in patients. This review examines the published impact of food allergy on affected children, adolescents and their families. It considers influences such as gender, age, disease severity, co-existing allergies and external influences, and examines how these may impact on allergy-related QoL and psychological distress including anxiety and depression. Implications of the impact are considered alongside avenues for future research

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: January 2010
Published date: August 2010
Keywords: anxiety, food allergy, quality of life, risk taking

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 72712
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/72712
ISSN: 0105-4538
PURE UUID: 1d259d28-a966-40c1-88e3-70e53943242f
ORCID for J.S. Lucas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8701-9975

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Date deposited: 23 Feb 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:46

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Contributors

Author: A.J. Cummings
Author: R.C. Knibb
Author: R.M. King
Author: J.S. Lucas ORCID iD

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