
Why? What do you gain by casting doubt on the circumstances of the death of a teenage boy?
( , Fri 13 Sep 2019, 22:07, Reply)

Would it be more tragic if he was a little baby? Less tragic if he were an old man?
Somebody died. Boohoo. My point is that they *weren't* being vigilant as a family.
If you have an food allergy so severe that consuming anything from that particular food group will kill you in under an hour, you shouldn't really be eating out whatsoever.
Even if a meal explicitly states that it contains no relevant allergens, it's still coming from a kitchen where those allergens are in abundance. Nobody can guarantee zero risk of cross contamination.
Likewise, nobody can guarantee that the staff are going to give you accurate information about the dish. Even if the family *did* enquire about the ingredients, it's still not very fucking vigilant considering the circumstances.
The original reports on this case that I read both explicitly stated that the family assumed the dish in question was safe because there was no mention of a marinade. Again, not very fucking vigilant. Neither of these reports mentioned anything about the family enquiring about allergens.
No matter which way it played out, even if they enquired about the allergens in the meal, they weren't being very fucking vigilant.
My issue with this story is the growing inability of the UK public to take responsibility for their own actions. It's always somebody else's fault.
What's wrong with saying "Our flippant behaviour in regards to our son's serious food allergy ended in tragedy.", unless you're hoping for some kind of financial restitution, obviously.
( , Sat 14 Sep 2019, 6:59, Reply)

Marinading is not cross-contamination. The allergen that killed him was an integral part of the dish, and should have been listed on the menu as such.
( , Sat 14 Sep 2019, 7:34, Reply)

In this case the marinade was plain old contamination.
My point is that even if the chicken had been nothing but a completely plain, unadulterated boiled fillet, there would still be a distinct chance of cross contamination considering its been prepared in a kitchen and handled by staff who also deal with a significant amount of dairy produce - its a fucking burger restaurant.
If you have a child with an allergy that severe, is it vigilant eating at a restaurant like that in the first place?
www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/sep/12/byron-restaurant-denies-wrongdoing-over-teenagers-allergy-death
( , Sat 14 Sep 2019, 8:25, Reply)