Have you any idea how long it takes to read through the ingredients of every processed food product you buy (and then search for the 'May contain traces... disclaimer)?
Granted. the lists these days are long (do we really need all that crap in our food ?)
I agree having upfront warnings are great but that raises the question : where do we stop ? Peanut allergy ? (they can use peanut oil to make fries ..) . Certain anti foaming agents used can cause severe reactions.
Soon on a package of chips near you : Gluten free, peanut oil free , olestra free , soy free , vegetarian (fries can be made in animal fat) ... see where this is headed ?
We live in a reverse world . The front says nothing, the ingredient list on the other hand...
The other problem is consistency. Brand a clearly labels their product "gluten free", other brands don't. And their products may very well be gluten free as well. Do you really think they do it out of compassion towards people who suffer from gluten allergy ? What is the size of that audience ? I mean the people who actually have a gluten problem versus the group who thinks they have a gluten problem ? That's my "irritation" .
Read the following attentively (there is a danger i will get flamed again) : Any new "fad" that comes along is picked up for marketing. I AM NOT CALLING GLUTEN ALLERGY A FAD ! i'm saying that there is so much buzz these days (like said before : by certain "specialist" magazines") that people start believing all kinds of things and start doing all kinds of things. Marekting picks that up very quickly and exploits it. That is what irks me.
We live in a world where people go to the doctor asking (mandating) for all kinds of medications "cause they saw a commercial on tv". but doctor it hurts everywhere , it must be severe ! it hurts if i push here, and there , and there and there and there , anywhere and everywhere. In reality it turns out their finger is broken....
I'd rather have a complete ingredients list without omission of anything. If that list is as long as my arm : ditch it...
You do know that "gluten-free" is not the same thing as "nominally gluten-free ingredients", right?
I wonder why you are so irritated by a company adding two words to a label? Adding dozens or even hundreds of words detailing how every ingredient was grown, processed, shipped, and stored, along with detailed description of the processing plant, how it is cleaned, etc., would really be preferred? Even if it means that the roughly 1% of the population that has celiac disease now needs to spend even more hours in the grocery store reading labels?
When our elder daughter was 4 she stopped growing, couldn't gain weight, and had unusual neurological problems. Turns out she had celiac disease. Symptoms can be all over the place because of the malnourishment caused by damaged intestines. No absorption of B vitamins?
Expect neurological issues.
When she gets contaminated food, it effects her for a number of days. Sometimes for a week or more. It causes gut pain, insomnia, anxiety, and foggy-headedness (try to do math homework when your brain isn't functioning correctly!). It isn't just an upset stomach or something mild like that. Antihistimines don't help - it isn't an allergy. She just needs to wait until her intestines recover. If getting 'glutened' happens too often the malnourishment can cause serious long-term health problems. But if she can stay on a strict gluten-free diet, there are basically no other health problems associated with this disease. In that sense it is the 'easiest' of the autoimmune disorders.
We have spent countless hours in grocery stores reading labels, and many labels are ambiguous. Companies that are willing to do the work to determine that their products are gluten free get our business, even if they charge more. And even then we have been burned. When Cheerios went gluten-free our daughter started eating them and got sick - a few days later they announced a recall of their products.
Likewise, medications can be the culprit. So we have also spent lots of time waiting for the pharmacist to call the pharmaceutical company to figure out if their product is gluten-free - and sometimes it isn't or the company doesn't know. Then we have to ask the doctor for alternative prescriptions, and the pharmacist calls more companies, etc. This process can literally take hours. And if the pharmaceutical company is in another time-zone or has limited hours of support it can take more than a day. I have called pharmaceutical companies myself on many occasions as well. And yes, she has been sick from both over-the-counter and prescription meds.
Are you irritated by pharmaceutical companies labeling medications as well?
Should we go back to "the good old days" when we didn't worry about this stuff, products had simple labels and people like my daughter were perpetually ill?