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                                            <p>Feb. 23, 2015 -- Life-threatening peanut allergies have mysteriously been
                                                on the rise in the past decade, with little hope for a cure.</p>
                                            <p xmlns:xalan="http://xml.apache.org/xalan">But a groundbreaking new study may offer a way to stem that rise, while
                                                another may offer some hope for those who are already allergic.</p>
                                            <p>Parents have been told for years to avoid giving foods containing peanuts
                                                to babies for fear of triggering an allergy. Now research shows the opposite
                                                is true: Feeding babies snacks made with peanuts before their first birthday
                                                appears to prevent that from happening.</p>
                                            <p>The study is published in the <i>New England Journal of Medicine,</i> and
                                                it was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy,
                                                Asthma and Immunology in Houston. It found that among children at high
                                                risk for getting peanut allergies, eating peanut snacks by 11 months of
                                                age and continuing to eat them at least three times a week until age 5
                                                cut their chances of becoming allergic by more than 80% compared to kids
                                                who avoided peanuts. Those at high risk were already allergic to egg, they
                                                had the skin condition <a href="http://www.webmd.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/eczema/default.htm" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">eczema</a>, or
                                                both.</p>
                                            <p>Overall, about 3% of kids who ate peanut butter or peanut snacks before
                                                their first birthday got an allergy, compared to about 17% of kids who
                                                didn’t eat them.</p>
                                            <p>“I think this study is an astounding and groundbreaking study, really,”
                                                says Katie Allen, MD, PhD. She's the director of the Center for Food and
                                                Allergy Research at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne,
                                                Australia. Allen was not involved in the research.</p>
                                            <p>Experts say the research should shift thinking about how kids develop
                                                <a href="http://www.webmd.com/allergies/guide/food-allergy-intolerances" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">food allergies</a>, and it should change the guidance doctors give to
                                                    parents.</p>
                                            <p>Meanwhile, for children and adults who are already <a href="http://www.webmd.com/allergies/guide/nut-allergy" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">allergic to peanuts</a>,
                                                another study presented at the same meeting held out hope of a treatment.</p>
                                            <p>A new skin patch called Viaskin allowed people with peanut allergies to
                                                eat tiny amounts of peanuts after they wore it for a year.</p>
                                             <h3>A Change in Guidelines?</h3>

                                            <p>Allergies to peanuts and other foods are on the rise. In the U.S., more
                                                than 2% of people react to peanuts, a 400% increase since 1997. And reactions
                                                to peanuts and other tree nuts can be especially severe. Nuts are the main
                                                reason people get a life-threatening problem called <a href="http://www.webmd.com/allergies/guide/anaphylaxis" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">anaphylaxis</a>.</p>
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