Food Allergy’s Educating Dynamo

By:
in Food Allergy Advocates
Published: June 10, 2014

karen

Karen Harris, President and Founder
Food Allergy Kids of Atlanta

To look at the activities and accomplishments of the non-profit Food Allergy Kids of Atlanta (FAKA), you’d think a full-time staff was running the operation. There are regular support group meetings, the organizing of food-free events for occasions like Easter and Halloween, and seminars and educational workshops for local families coping with food allergies.

As if that weren’t enough, FAKA holds workshops for school educators across the state of Georgia and has advocated at the State Capitol. But save for a few much-appreciated volunteers, the brains and muscle behind the operation is a tireless force of nature named Karen Harris.

In the second of installment of The Allergy Advocates series, Allergic Living is pleased to honor Karen Harris for her extraordinary public service. Harris goes above and beyond to support, advocate and educate on behalf of families living with food allergies.

Consider this: Harris has made food allergy and anaphylaxis awareness presentations to literally thousands of school teachers, administrators and nurses. (Her presentations to schools have become so popular that at times she has trouble scheduling them.)

She has been invited to speak before the state association of school nurses and other educational conventions. She is also now the vice president of education and outreach for Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Connection Team, a new national food allergy organization.

Senior Allergic Living contributor Claire Gagné speaks to Karen Harris about her daughter’s multiple food allergies, what makes schools listen to her and where she’s setting her sights next.

Your youngest daughter has multiple food allergies, but there are other allergies in the family. Tell me the history.

I have three children, my oldest is 19, she manages a tree nut allergy and she is very allergic to horses. My son is 16, he doesn’t have food allergies but when he gets around hay or dust, he gets bad respiratory and eye symptoms [he doesn’t have asthma]. My youngest daughter, Mika, who is 6 years old, has multiple severe food allergies. Currently, she can only eat nine or 10 foods. She’s on an amino-acid formula.

Wow. I can’t imagine.

Yes, we had a really difficult time with her diagnosis. We went through 11 pediatricians before we were referred to an allergist. When she was around six months old I gave her a bite of banana, and immediately hives popped up all over her face.

When we saw the allergist for the first time, they did a skin-prick test on her back and she had a severe reaction. They told us we were dealing with multiple food allergies. I was lost and terrified.

I remember coming home and just starting to educate myself. I found one local Yahoo group in Georgia. I decided there needed to be more support. I launched a website and held lots of support group meetings until I became more educated about food allergies and anaphylaxis. I served on the executive council for the former Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network and participated in their Safe@School training program. From there I started entering schools here in Georgia and really built a strong relationship with our schools and educators. It just spread by word of mouth.

What do you teach in your presentations and why have you been so successful?

We cover how to avoid the allergen, recognizing the signs and symptoms of an allergic reaction, how to enact emergency protocol and state laws. I think we’re successful because our presentations only include facts and statistics. We never share personal opinion and we don’t allow families or students with food allergies to come to the presentations. I go in as a third party to support the school, and they often don’t even know I have a child with food allergies.

As a parent, you might have one child going to school with allergies. We don’t always realize the school educators may have to deal with 70 children with allergies.

I remember one educator coming up to me after a presentation, literally shaking. She said: ‘I don’t know what to do. I have six kids in my class with food allergies and they’re all different foods, and I have an autistic kid who has to have peanut butter.’ It was obvious she was nervous and fearful. But that’s who we want to be confident – our educators – so they can teach our children and know what to do in an emergency. We don’t want them scared or nervous.

Next: School issues, lobbying and dining out