Sitting with her husband and four children on a Southwest Airlines flight this past March, Chelsia Calvert encountered many mothers’ worst nightmare.
As her family slept beside her, tired from attending a family wedding in South Carolina, she watched as flight attendants passed out bags of peanuts to fellow passengers in the rows ahead of her. Minutes later, her then-nine-year-old son Christian, began breaking out in hives.
Calvert’s son has life-threatening allergies to peanuts and tree nuts, as well as a less severe allergy to shellfish. Prior to boarding her flight from Atlanta to Houston, Calvert had taken every step possible to protect her son: She made note of his allergy when booking her tickets, made follow-up calls to remind Southwest LUV, -1.20% of his allergy, and informed the on-ground and in-flight crew when she arrived at the airport.
“They still made the mistake of handing out peanuts,” Calvert said. “It was the scariest thing I have ever experienced.”
Soon after Christian began reacting, Calvert found herself using an EpiPen, the device which administers epinephrine to reduce the symptoms of a severe allergic reaction. It was the first time she had needed to use the EpiPen on her son since they first discovered how severe Christian’s allergy was when he was two years old.