| Literature DB >> 28496564 |
Mario Sánchez-Borges1,2, Victoria Cardona3,4, Margitta Worm5, Richard F Lockey6, Aziz Sheikh7, Paul A Greenberger8, Ignacio J Ansotegui9, Motohiro Ebisawa10, Yehia El-Gamal11, Stanley Fineman12, Mario Geller13, Alexei Gonzalez-Estrada14, Luciana Tanno15,16, Bernard Y Thong17.
Abstract
Allergic and hypersensitivity reactions such as anaphylaxis and asthma exacerbations may occur during air travel. Although the exact incidence of in-flight asthma and allergic emergencies is not known, we have concerns that this subject has not received the attention it warrants. There is a need to provide passengers at risk and airlines with the necessary measures to prevent and manage these emergencies. A review of the epidemiology, management and approaches to prevention of allergic and asthma emergencies during air travel is presented with the goal of increasing awareness about these important, potentially preventable medical events.Entities:
Keywords: Air travel; Aircraft; Allergic reaction; Anaphylaxis; Asthma; Emergency; Flight; Food allergy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28496564 PMCID: PMC5415712 DOI: 10.1186/s40413-017-0148-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Rick factors for medical and allergic events during air travel
| An increase of passenger’s age | |
| Flight stress and anxiety, including increased security procedures | |
| Disruption of routine | |
| Changes in the cabin environment (temperature, humidity, air pressure) | |
| Decreased seat space | |
| Flight delays | |
| Alcohol/drug intake | |
| Longer flights | |
| Altered circadian rhythm | |
| Jet lag | |
| Pre-existing medical conditions |
Prevalence of in-flight allergic reactions
| Authors (year of publication) | Prevalence (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Szmajer et al. (2001) [ | 2.4 | 13 |
| Delaune et al. (2003) [ | 2.8 | 12 |
| Baltsezk (2008) [ | 3.7 | 11 |
| Sand et al. (2012) [ | 2.2 | 17 |
Measures that reduce the risk of an in-flight reaction to peanut and tree nutsa
| 1. Passengers requesting any kind of special accommodation (e.g., peanut/tree nut snacks not be distributed, announcement to not eat items with peanut/tree nut, request special peanut/tree nut-free meal, buffer zone, pre-board, request to sit in a certain seat/zone). | |
| 2. Peanut/tree nut-free meals. | |
| 3. Wiping of tray tables | |
| 4. Avoidance of airline pillows or blankets | |
| 5. Buffer zones around which peanut or nut products cannot be consumed | |
| 6. Request other passengers not to consume peanut/tree nut-containing products | |
| 7. Announcement that passengers do not eat peanut/tree nut containing goods | |
| 8. Not consuming airline-provided food |
aModified from reference [28]
Airline policies for allergic passengers (Data from 13 air carriers) a
| Number of airlines | |
|---|---|
| Pre-boarding arrangements | |
| • Request a food “buffer zone” | 5 |
| • No “buffer zone” | 3 |
| • Request “allergen-free meal” | 1 |
| • Pre-boarding to wipe down seats and table trays | Yes 4 |
| No 1 | |
| • Buffer zone for fragrance sensitivity | 2 |
| • Announcements to inform customers there is a peanut or tree-nut allergic passenger on board or that peanut products will not be served | Yes 4 |
| No 7 | |
| Free snack policy on peanut/nut/sesame | |
| • Serving peanuts | Yes 2 |
| No 11 | |
| • Serving nuts and sesameaw | Yes 8 |
| No 1 | |
| • First class warmed nuts | 3 |
| Gluten-free meals | Yes 11 |
| No 1 | |
| Lactose-free meals | 1 |
| Shellfish served | Yes 4 |
| No 3 | |
| Fish served | Yes 6 |
| No 1 | |
| Buffer zones for passengers allergic to pets | 5 |
a In general air lines cannot guarantee an entirely peanut-free environment. Modified from reference [30]
Recommendations to prevent and manage in-flight allergic events
| • Promote the prevention of allergic diseases via passenger education |