The United Kingdom passed a new allergen labeling law after a teenage died from eating a baguette with undeclared sesame. "Natasha's Law" will require full ingredient and allergen labelling on all food made on premises and pre-packed for direct sale.
She succumbed from anaphylaxis after she ate sesame in a baguette. The sesame was baked into the dough, of an artichoke, olive and tapenade baguette bought from a Pret shop at about 07:00 BST in Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport on 17 July 2016. After eating the item, "she began to feel ill during a British Airways flight, and suffered a cardiac arrest. Despite her father administering two EpiPen injections, she died later the same day."
The
Food Standards Agency (UK) lists 14 allergens that require identification in food - celery, cereals containing gluten (such as barley and oats), crustaceans (such as prawns, crabs and lobsters), eggs, fish, lupin, milk, molluscs (such as mussels and oysters), mustard, peanuts, sesame, soybeans, sulphur dioxide and sulphites (at a concentration of more than ten parts per million) and tree nuts (such as almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts, brazil nuts, cashews, pecans, pistachios and macadamia nuts).
This new law "applies to any business that is preparing, packing and selling food from the same premises, or food that is packed and then sold from a mobile stall or vehicle. This includes: cafes and coffee shops, takeaway and fish & chip restaurants, sandwich shops, farm shops, as well as work, school and hospital canteens."
In the US, sesame was recently added to the list of allergens that require labeling. Mandatory labeling goes into effect in January of 2023.
This case demonstrates that there are people who can have serious symptoms form sesame.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-58756597
Pret allergy death: Parents welcome Natasha's allergy law
By Alex Therrien
BBC News
10/1/21