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Woman Calls The Police After Learning What Her Sister Served For Lunch
Close-up of distressed woman holding her head, expressing anxiety related to allergy dispute and arrest incident.

Woman Ends Up In Hospital After Visiting Sister, Involves The Police And Cuts Off Family

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Food allergies are no joke — they can be a life-threatening condition. People can be allergic to many things, such as nuts, latex, and citrus, but one of the most common food allergies is shellfish allergy. Research shows that around 2% of the world’s population has a shellfish allergy, and 0.9% report a challenge-confirmed allergy.

This woman was allergic to shellfish, too, yet her sister didn’t believe it. So, she decided to play a game: she “tested” her sister’s allergies by feeding her shellfish. What followed was akin to a scene from a chaotic Hollywood movie: an ambulance, lots of shouting, threats to call the police, and family drama on a scale not experienced by most.

RELATED:

    A woman shared a story about how her sister almost got her to meet her maker by “testing” her allergies

    Image credits: Breville USA / flickr (not the actual photo)

    The sister didn’t believe her sibling was allergic to shellfish and fed it to her on purpose

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    Image credits: Curated Lifestyle / unsplash (not the actual photo)

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    Image credits: anon

    Food allergies can be life-threatening, yet many people who don’t have them tend to minimize their impact

    Image credits: Getty Images / unsplash (not the actual photo)

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    The way this story unfolded is definitely wild. It’s one thing not to believe someone has allergies, but it’s a huge leap to try to “test” them by intentionally exposing them to the allergen. Living with a food allergy can actually be quite dangerous, especially when you have people in your life who are inclined to dismiss them.

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    People with food allergies are safest at home. Research shows that when people eat outside the home, there’s a 50% greater chance that their accidental exposure to food allergens will result in their passing away. In fact, 32.2% of anaphylaxis hospital admissions are related to accidental food allergen consumption.

    An allergic person doesn’t have to eat a plate of mollusks to feel the effects. Minute traces of an allergen can cause a severe reaction. According to the non-profit FARE (Food Allergy Research & Education), “Although ingestion is the primary cause of severe reactions, in some cases, skin contact or breathing in a food protein (e.g., steam from cooking shellfish) can cause symptoms.”

    Those who live with allergies often experience constant anxiety about being exposed to allergens. One study showed that children with food allergies get bullied at school. 57% of schoolchildren report having their allergen thrown at them, leading them to feel unsafe. This continues well into adulthood, perhaps without the thrown food aspect, where even adult peers don’t believe they’re allergic and minimize the possible reactions they might have, which are actually life-threatening.

    The myth that people fake their allergies might stem from misidentifying and mislabeling sensitivities as allergies

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    Accusing someone of faking their allergies seems beyond rude. Yet, the OP’s sister is not the first person in the world to do that. And, perhaps, not the last. In recent years, researchers have found that many people with allergies misidentify their symptoms from eating certain foods as allergies.

    In fact, according to the 2019 study, half of the people who think that they have a food allergy actually don’t. The researchers found that people sometimes misattribute symptoms such as bloating, diarrhea, or stomach pain to allergies. However, “convincing” allergies, as described in the study, are characterized by symptoms such as throat tightening and/or vomiting.

    “There are so many adults out there who have a negative reaction to a food,” Ruchi Gupta, a professor of pediatrics at Northwestern University and a co-author of the study, told The Guardian. “It is really important to get a proper diagnosis so that they can really know is this something treatable like lactose intolerance, or is this a life-threatening food allergy that they need to be very careful with.”

    Of course, this is no reason to assume that most people who say they have food allergies are faking it. It’s especially hard to believe that a sister who has seen her sibling react to shellfish before would do something like this. Yet this might somewhat explain the sister’s thought process.

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    In the comments, the woman shared more about her troubled dynamic with her sister

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    The story left many people speechless: “Your sister has to face consequences”

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    Image credits: Ahmet Kurt / unsplash (not the actual photo)

    In an update, the woman shared what she planned to do next about her sister and mother

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    Image credits: anon

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    People didn’t shy away from reacting harshly: “Your sister needs to be either in jail or in a mental ward”

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    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    Hi there, fellow pandas! As a person (over)educated both in social sciences and literature, I'm most interested in how we connect and behave online (and sometimes in real life too.) The human experience is weird, so I try my best to put its peculiarities in writing. As a person who grew up chronically online, I now try to marry two sides of myself: the one who knows too much about MySpace, and the one who can't settle and needs to see every corner of the world.

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    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Kornelija Viečaitė

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Hi there, fellow pandas! As a person (over)educated both in social sciences and literature, I'm most interested in how we connect and behave online (and sometimes in real life too.) The human experience is weird, so I try my best to put its peculiarities in writing. As a person who grew up chronically online, I now try to marry two sides of myself: the one who knows too much about MySpace, and the one who can't settle and needs to see every corner of the world.

    What do you think ?
    Julie S
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Why do so many people not believe someone when they say they have an allergy. It's completely mad.

    UnclePanda
    Community Member
    Premium
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Just yesterday, BP ran a story about a woman who pretended egg allergies but really just didn't like them. It's THOSE people who are messing it up for the rest of us.

    Load More Replies...
    Crystalwitch60
    Community Member
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    For all those nasty trolls, blaming op for not having an epi pen , what f kin difference would that make eh ? Would it have stopped the psycho sis not do what she did NO !! and op would still have needed a hospital visit ffs what is wrong with people the trolls are as vile as ops sister 🤬,want an update, on the police report ,

    Roxy222uk
    Community Member
    26 minutes ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yes, the epipen just buys you a bit of time! Otherwise the consequences are the same. It’s not a ‘cure’.

    Load More Replies...
    43Duckies
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A note for those who are surprised that she doesn't have an Epipen: Epipens are still under patent, and a decade or two ago an evil investor bought the patent and massively inflated the price. Epipens only cost $1-$30 to make: the d**g, Epinephrine, is cheap, so most of the cost is for whatever model of injector. Now, I don't know where OP lives, but (as an example of the price-gouging by the current patent owners/manufacturers), in the United States, if you don't have insurance that covers Epipens a 2-pack will cost you anywhere from $170 to $814 to buy out of pocket. And even with insurance, your cost can run anywhere from a $15 copay, to upwards of $700 (if you have a lower monthly cost plan —I wince just saying that, as "lower cost" premiums are still out-of-reach for many— that has high deductibles that must be met before full coverage). And you're supposed to replace them every 12-18 months, whether you use them or not.

    43Duckies
    Community Member
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I want to add, I jusr realized that the low-end of the out-of-pocket cost for Epipens in the US is actually around $350, for a "generic" version that the manufacturer added after the outrage at the 600% mark-up after the patent was purchased. $170 is about what the cost would have been today (with standard inflation) if it had stayed at the pre-patent-shark cost (which was about $100 in 2007).

    Load More Replies...
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    Julie S
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Why do so many people not believe someone when they say they have an allergy. It's completely mad.

    UnclePanda
    Community Member
    Premium
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Just yesterday, BP ran a story about a woman who pretended egg allergies but really just didn't like them. It's THOSE people who are messing it up for the rest of us.

    Load More Replies...
    Crystalwitch60
    Community Member
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    For all those nasty trolls, blaming op for not having an epi pen , what f kin difference would that make eh ? Would it have stopped the psycho sis not do what she did NO !! and op would still have needed a hospital visit ffs what is wrong with people the trolls are as vile as ops sister 🤬,want an update, on the police report ,

    Roxy222uk
    Community Member
    26 minutes ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yes, the epipen just buys you a bit of time! Otherwise the consequences are the same. It’s not a ‘cure’.

    Load More Replies...
    ADVERTISEMENT
    43Duckies
    Community Member
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A note for those who are surprised that she doesn't have an Epipen: Epipens are still under patent, and a decade or two ago an evil investor bought the patent and massively inflated the price. Epipens only cost $1-$30 to make: the d**g, Epinephrine, is cheap, so most of the cost is for whatever model of injector. Now, I don't know where OP lives, but (as an example of the price-gouging by the current patent owners/manufacturers), in the United States, if you don't have insurance that covers Epipens a 2-pack will cost you anywhere from $170 to $814 to buy out of pocket. And even with insurance, your cost can run anywhere from a $15 copay, to upwards of $700 (if you have a lower monthly cost plan —I wince just saying that, as "lower cost" premiums are still out-of-reach for many— that has high deductibles that must be met before full coverage). And you're supposed to replace them every 12-18 months, whether you use them or not.

    43Duckies
    Community Member
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I want to add, I jusr realized that the low-end of the out-of-pocket cost for Epipens in the US is actually around $350, for a "generic" version that the manufacturer added after the outrage at the 600% mark-up after the patent was purchased. $170 is about what the cost would have been today (with standard inflation) if it had stayed at the pre-patent-shark cost (which was about $100 in 2007).

    Load More Replies...
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