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The Lowdown On The Labeling Law

On January 1, 2006, the Food Allergen Labeling Consumer Protection Act (FALCPA) went into effect. Do you know what this new law did for you? We are concerned by the number of people who don't understand the basics of FALCPA. It did not provide for gluten free labeling. So how did it change the way food is labeled? To check your understanding, read dietitian Jodi B. Hadaway's June posting on our Ask The Dietitian  page.

 
 

Where's All The
Good Food?

There is far more delicious GF food on the internet than you will ever find in local stores. But why pay all those shipping charges yourself, when you can join the GFL Buyer's Co-Op? Order with us, and pay a fraction of the normal shipping fees! Membership in the Co-Op is free. For more info - or to join - click here to send your email request.

 

 

Meals To Go
by Jan Falwell

Do you dream of enjoying delicious "home-cooked" gluten free meals in a minute? Well, your dream has come true. Meals to Go,  produced locally by GFL co-founder Jan Falwell, premiered on March 10, 2007. If you missed the event, just click your preferred file format to learn more:

WORD       PDF

 

 
 

Gluten Free Oats!

How about a steaming, hot bowl of oatmeal? If you've been avoiding oats solely because of cross contamination issues, here's some good news: Wild Oats Market in Lexington Green is now carrying Gifts of Nature Gluten Free Oats. Break out the maple and brown sugar! Important: Oat consumption remains a controversial topic for gluten-sensitive persons. Please consult your doctor first!

 

 

Awareness Is The Key


Increasing awareness of wheat and gluten-related disorders is what Gluten Free Lexington is all about. Celiac disease and gluten intolerance in particular are among the most under-diagnosed diseases in the world, partly because symptoms are not always gastrointestinal in nature. If you know someone who has unexplained symptoms of fatigue, depression or irritability, abdominal pain, gas/bloating, weight loss, diarrhea or constipation, heartburn, nausea/vomiting, headaches, seizures, muscle, joint or bone pain, confusion or memory loss, skin rash, osteoporosis (early onset), or any of the other symptoms that can result from gluten-related disorders, encourage them to consider being tested for celiac disease or gluten intolerance. Allergic reactions after eating could be a sign of wheat allergy, a separate medical condition also relieved by a gluten free diet.

To learn more about how to create awareness of gluten related disorders, see the article below. Then be sure to browse the links on our Resources page. Our web site is a rallying point for the local Lexington area, but the Resources page is your portal into a vast world of information, food, and encouragement.

 


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Keep The Main Thing, The Main Thing

Many doctors and dietitians consider the gluten free diet to be the most difficult diet in America. After all, we must avoid an ingredient that is not identified on food labels, eating anywhere outside of our own kitchen is a challenge at best, and our allowable margin of error in avoiding gluten is an unforgiving zero.

Wouldn't you like to get off of this merry-go-round?

Stephen R. Covey said, "The main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing." For those of us on the gluten free diet, it's easy to put all of our time and creative energy into planning our diet, and lose sight of the 'main thing' - the thing that will make our diet easier, and perhaps even lead to a cure. The 'main thing'  is to create public awareness of celiac disease, gluten sensitivity, and wheat allergy.

 

 

Why is public awareness the main thing?

The single most important reason that the gluten free lifestyle is so difficult is that both the food industry and the medical community are woefully uninformed about gluten related disorders. Celiac disease (CD) in particular is the most underdiagnosed disease in America: at the time of this writing, only 90,000 of the estimated 2-4 million cases have been diagnosed. A second ailment - gluten sensitivity - affects an estimated 12% of Americans, most of whom don't even know what's ailing them. Still another group suffers from wheat allergy. And so millions upon millions of Americans are straddled with food-related medical conditions that they don't know they have, that the food industry is not accomodating, and that the medical community is not adequately addressing!

The main reason there is no cure for these conditions, and that the gluten free lifestyle is so difficult, can therefore be summed up in three words: lack of awareness. Once public awareness has been achieved, the first domino will have been tipped. As the millions of Americans mentioned above begin to be diagnosed, at least three other dominoes will begin to fall:

  • Pharmaceutical companies, eager to profit from a cure that would benefit millions of Americans, will work harder and faster at developing treatments.
  • The food service and retail food industries will begin to respond by marketing more satisfying gluten free products.
  • The retail food industry will begin accurately identifying gluten on product ingredient labels, and eating out safely in restaurants will become a more widespread possibility.

 

How can we make the main thing the main thing?

How can you help to create public awareness? Below are a few ideas to help get you started. This list is a 'living document,' and will be updated as new ideas come to the fore. Please feel free to offer your thoughts - just click here to send an email to the webmaster.


 1.  Join Gluten Free Lexington, or make a donation. After all, creating awareness is our main mission.

 2.  Contribute to other awareness groups or campaigns, such as the Gluten Intolerance Group (GIG) and the National Foundation for Celiac Awareness (NFCA).

3.  Write your Congressperson and them ask to co-sponsor/support H. Con. Res 70 as Celiac Disease Awareness Month.  It's easy! Just click here.

 4.  Take the visual approach. Web sites such as Cafe Press and Celiac.com sell attractive, eye-catching T-shirts, car magnets & bumper stickers, lapel pins, etc. You name it, then Google it!

 5.  Request Gluten Free Lexington  brochures from your GFL leaders and ask your doctors/dentist to place them in their reception area. Take them to teachers and health care providers at  your child's school or day care center.

 6.  Patronize restaurants that have gluten free menus, and tell the manager why you are there.

 7.  Put it on the information highway! Link to our web site from yours...place links to our site in your email signatures...put it in your blog, on your MySpace, etc.

 8.  Keep those letters flowing - to your local newspaper health editor, to Congress, to the medical community, etc. For helpful tips, and a sample letter to a legislator, click here. 

 9.  Read awareness sites, such as GIG, the Celiac Disease Awareness Campaign, or the NFCA. Or, just explore: type 'gluten awareness' or 'celiac awareness' in your favorite search engine.

 10.  If you work in the media... well, you know what to do!

11.  Hire a skywriter! (Just kidding...unless, of course, you have the money...)

 

Check this web site monthly for more resources on how to enjoy life after gluten!

 

 

All information on this web site Copyright © 2008 by Gluten Free Lexington. All rights reserved. This web site is intended to provide basic information about gluten-related disorders, and the gluten free diet. Gluten-related disorders include gluten intolerance, Celiac Disease/Dermatitis Herpetiformis, and wheat allergies. The information contained herein is not intended to provide, nor does it constitute, medical advice. Dietary changes based on information on this web site should not be initiated without first consulting a physician. Celiac (or coeliac) disease is also commonly referred to as celiac sprue, or non-tropical sprue. It should not be confused with gluten intolerance or wheat allergy, which are separate medical conditions.

unexplained fatigue, depression, irritability, abdominal pain, gas, bloating, weight loss, diarrhea, constipation, heartburn, nausea, vomiting, headaches, seizures, muscle pain, joint pain, bone pain, confusion, memory loss, skin rash, osteoporosis