3 C
New York
Saturday, December 13, 2025
HomeNewsUK Teen Dies Of Allergic Reaction To Nuts. Now Family Wants Change...

UK Teen Dies Of Allergic Reaction To Nuts. Now Family Wants Change In Law

Date:

Related stories

Mike Johnson defends Sept. 2 boat strike, says survivors were “able-bodied” and operation followed protocol

Highlights: Mike Johnson says the follow-on strike killed “able-bodied,”...

Indian American lawmakers say Trump’s India tariff plan and H1B fee hikes are raising costs for US firms

Highlights: Indian American lawmakers say the administration’s 50 percent...

India sets its own pollution standards, says global WHO air quality norms are advisory

Highlights: India told Parliament that WHO air quality guidelines...

Washington debates new ‘Core 5’ plan linking US, China, Russia, India and Japan

Highlights: A draft National Security Strategy circulating in Washington...

The family of a British teenager who died from an allergic reaction to a sandwich called Friday for a change in the law on food labelling, as an inquest into her death ended. Natasha Ednan-Laperouse, 15, who suffered from numerous allergies, went into cardiac arrest on a 2016 flight from London to Nice after eating a baguette containing sesame seeds from sandwich chain Pret A Manger. There was no allergen information on the packaging or the store’s food display cabinet, but this is not required by British law. A coroner concluded the teen had been “reassured by that” and said he would advise the government on whether food labelling regulations should be tightened.
Nadim Ednan-Laperouse, the victim’s father, said the inquest “should serve as a watershed moment to make meaningful change to save lives”. “If Pret A Manger were following the law, then the law was playing Russian Roulette with our daughter’s life,” he said in a family statement. “It’s clear that the food labelling laws as they stand today are not fit for purpose and it is now time to change the law.”Natasha Ednan-Laperouse had the fatal reaction aboard a British Airways plane in July 2016 after buying the baguette, which had sesame seeds inside its dough, from a Pret outlet at London Heathrow airport.
At the time, the company relied on stickers on food display units highlighting that allergy information was available by asking staff or visiting its website. During the hearing it emerged the chain had received a “specific warning” the previous year about the dangers of not signposting the allergen after multiple sesame-related incidents. “Overall I am left with the impression that Pret had not addressed the fact that monitoring food allergy in a business selling more than 200 million items a year was something to be taken very seriously indeed,” Cummings said. Clive Schlee, chief executive of the chain which has more than 500 stores including in Paris, Hong Kong, Dubai and several US cities, said it was “deeply sorry for Natasha’s death”. “All of us at Pret want to see meaningful change come from this tragedy. We will make sure that it does,” he said.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here