Is 'Vegan' Food Safe for People with Food Allergies? — The Natasha Allergy Research Foundation (2024)

If you have life threatening allergies to foods like milk, eggs or fish etc, the rise in veganismshould be a good thing. The increase in vegan options should make things easier, or at least you’d think so.

However,it would seem that choosingvegan is anything but safe for those with food allergies.

The Food Standards Agency warns that consumers should not rely on a ‘vegan’ logo if they have milk, fish, crustacean, mollusc and/or egg food allergies.

Any food product labelled as ‘suitable for vegans’ may not be appropriate for certain allergic consumers due to unintentional cross-contact with allergenic ingredients of animal origin. It would seem there is a very real risk in trusting anything with a vegan claim because this doesn’t seem to mean it’s guaranteed ‘free-from’ allergens like milk, eggs, fish etc. Allergic consumers should only ever trust claims such as allergen free or milk free.

Furthermore, the Food.gov website says:

When you buy vegan food, you might not expect it to contain any trace amounts of milk, egg, fish,crustaceansand molluscs. However, trace amounts of cross contamination can occur when vegan food is produced in a factory or kitchen that also handles non-vegan food.

This is very confusing for the consumer. If I was a vegan, I’d expect my food to be completely free from animal products. It would seem there is a danger because less care is taken for the vegan consumers as there is no risk of death fromanaphylaxis?So, vegans could be, and most probably are, consuming traces of animal products but arenever really made aware of it.

Anallergic consumer would potentially be at risk of anaphylaxis from such exposure to trace elements, so care isneededand checking is essential before choosing anything labelled as vegan.

This is whyyou’ll often see vegan products with precautionary ‘may contain’ labelling, because they are not produced under such strict guidelines as allergen free products.

This message really needs to bebettercommunicated, not just amongst the allergy community but to thegeneral publicand in particular waiting staff.

Hands up who has asked for the allergen menu and been brought either the gluten free menu, or the vegan one? People seem to use allergies, gluten free and vegan interchangeably which is very dangerous.

I suspect that there is a very poor understanding of the difference between vegan and allergy labelling and the risks to the consumer.

Some people with allergies feel shy about mentioning them, and may choose options from the menu hoping they will be OK. They might assume a menu item marked as vegan is safe.

Couple that with the fact that statistics show the younger generation are less likely not to be carrying their adrenaline pensand you could have a very vulnerable group putting their lives at risk.

It is imperative that all allergic consumers double-check, even if the allergen menu looks like it’s very clearly marked. Never trust only the menu labelling or the details on a restaurant app. When choosing vegan products from the supermarket or deli, use caution because it may not be safe. Not all vegan products will carry a ‘may contain’ warning but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re safe.

Allergic consumers should ALWAYS ask,checkand insist on seeing packaging if applicable.

I wonder how vegans feel about this too? I have many vegan friends who would not be happy to choose a vegan dessert and find out that it contained even traces of milk and eggs. Do vegans expect more care to be taken in the production of their food? I’m pretty sure they would, but since mistakes are not life-threatening for them, we’ll never really know if there are traces present unless all food is rigorously tested.

I don’t thinkmany people know that there is such a high risk from vegan products for the allergic consumer. Everyone I speak to is surprised to hear this, so how can we get this message out to everyone?

This month is typically often celebrated as championing vegan values with the ‘Veganuary’ trend. It’s a great initiative to get people eating a more plant-based diet. Going vegan isn’t practical for all people with life-threatening food allergies, not least because the choices are too limited when you are already cutting out other foods which might make up a large portion of the vegan diet. We just can’t trust processed vegan foods nor the options available when eating out.

Keep sharing information with the people youcome into contact withwhen ordering and buying food. Tell them about this and ask your vegan friends if they know that ‘Food Law’ allows their plant-based foods to contain traces of animal products. I’m not sure we can change thislawbut we can help raise awareness to those most at risk from exposure to food allergens.

Is 'Vegan' Food Safe for People with Food Allergies? — The Natasha Allergy Research Foundation (2024)
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