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Injuries to Children With Food Allergies at Chicago Daycares

Every morning, parents across Chicago drop their children off at daycare trusting that staff will keep them safe. For the roughly one in 13 children in the United States who have food allergies, that trust carries extra weight. A missed label, a forgotten allergy plan, or an untrained caregiver can turn snack time into a life-threatening emergency. When a Chicago daycare fails to protect a child with a known food allergy, the consequences can be severe, and Illinois law gives families the right to hold that facility accountable. If your child was hurt at a Chicago daycare because staff ignored or mishandled a food allergy, a Chicago abogado de lesiones personales at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can help you understand your options.

Table of Contents

What Illinois Law Requires of Chicago Daycares Regarding Food Allergies

Illinois takes food allergy safety at daycares seriously, and the law puts real obligations on licensed facilities. In 2021, Illinois passed the Childhood Anaphylactic Policy Act (HB 0102), often called Elijah’s Law. This legislation requires the Illinois Department of Public Health, in consultation with the Board of Education, to establish anaphylaxis policies and procedures for school districts and daycare settings. The law was named after Elijah-Alavi Silvera, a three-year-old who died after a preschool staff member gave him a grilled cheese sandwich. Even though the preschool had documentation of Elijah’s life-threatening milk allergy, asthma, and other allergies, the facility fed him the sandwich. The facility then failed to follow emergency protocols to treat anaphylaxis.

Illinois DCFS currently licenses almost 9,000 daycares throughout the state and requires each one to have at least one staff member present at all times who has taken a training course in recognizing and responding to anaphylaxis. That is not a suggestion. It is a legal requirement. Illinois child care facilities are required to develop an anaphylaxis plan and have at least one staff member who is trained on anaphylaxis present at all times. Beyond the anaphylaxis plan, in-service training within 90 days of hire must cover topics including communicable diseases, medicine administration, and allergic reactions. Under Illinois DCFS Rule 407, which governs licensing standards for day care centers, health and safety updates include medical action plans for asthma and allergies, as well as food handler training requirements. A daycare operating in Lincoln Park, Wicker Park, or anywhere else in Chicago must meet all of these standards or risk losing its license and facing civil liability.

To help educate caregivers about the severity of food allergies and anaphylaxis, schools and daycare centers must communicate their allergy policies annually to parents. If the daycare your child attends has not provided you with a written allergy policy, that alone may signal a problem worth investigating.

How Food Allergy Injuries Happen at Chicago Daycares

Food allergy injuries at daycares rarely happen because of freak accidents. They happen because someone failed to do their job. Think about a busy lunchroom at a daycare in Rogers Park or Pilsen. A staff member grabs the wrong meal for a child. No one checks the allergy list posted on the wall. Within minutes, that child is in anaphylactic shock. That scenario plays out across the country with troubling regularity.

The most common failures that lead to food allergy injuries at Chicago daycares include serving the wrong food to an allergic child, failing to read ingredient labels, ignoring a child’s individual care plan, not having an epinephrine auto-injector on hand, and failing to call 911 immediately after a reaction begins. If a child has an allergy and needs care for a medical condition, parents typically provide the daycare with detailed instructions, and if the daycare exposes the child to an allergen or fails to give medication on schedule, they may be negligent if the child suffers a bad reaction.

Cross-contamination is another serious risk. A staff member who handles peanut butter at breakfast and then touches a peanut-allergic child’s food later in the day can trigger a severe reaction. Daycares that do not have written food handling protocols, separate preparation areas, or proper cleaning procedures put allergic children at risk every single day. According to the Allergy and Asthma Network, one in 12 children in the United States has food allergies, and 25 percent of reactions in school settings occur without a previous diagnosis. That means daycares must be prepared even when a family has not yet identified a child’s allergy.

Failure to act fast enough after a reaction begins is just as dangerous as the exposure itself. Anaphylaxis can progress from mild symptoms to a life-threatening emergency in minutes. Anaphylaxis is a severe allergic reaction that can include a wide range of symptoms and can start quickly, causing a life-threatening emergency, and allergic reactions can be unpredictable as to when they occur, the type of symptoms, and their severity, making it critical for daycare staff to know the signs and be prepared to act.

Illinois Negligence Law and Your Right to Sue a Chicago Daycare

When a Chicago daycare fails to protect your child from a food allergy injury, Illinois law provides a path to compensation through a personal injury claim based on negligence. To win that claim, you must prove four things: the daycare owed your child a duty of care, the daycare breached that duty, the breach caused your child’s injury, and your child suffered actual damages as a result.

The duty of care piece is straightforward. Every licensed daycare in Illinois accepts a legal obligation to keep children safe. That obligation is reinforced by the Illinois Child Care Act of 1969, which sets the foundation for DCFS licensing standards, including the allergy and anaphylaxis requirements discussed above. When a daycare violates those regulations, it strengthens the negligence case significantly. A violation of a state regulation governing the profession would strongly indicate that the defendant did not meet the applicable standard of care.

Breach of duty can take many forms in a food allergy case. Serving an allergen to a child whose allergy is documented, failing to maintain an anaphylaxis plan, keeping expired or no epinephrine auto-injector on site, or having no trained staff member present at the time of the reaction all qualify. If a daycare worker served a child a food item without checking the ingredients and noting which children have allergies, the facility may be negligent.

Damages in these cases can include emergency room bills, hospital stays, follow-up medical care, prescription costs, and the pain and suffering your child endured. If the reaction caused lasting harm, such as a brain injury from oxygen deprivation during anaphylaxis, the recoverable damages grow significantly to include future medical care and, in serious cases, loss of future earning capacity. Illinois also allows parents to pursue compensation for their own emotional distress when a child suffers a severe injury. In the most tragic cases, where a child dies from an anaphylactic reaction at a daycare, families may have a wrongful death claim under Illinois law.

What to Do After Your Child Has a Food Allergy Reaction at a Chicago Daycare

The first thing you do after learning your child had an allergic reaction at daycare matters enormously, both for your child’s health and for any future legal claim. Your first call should be to 911 or to get your child to the nearest emergency room, whether that is Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Lurie Children’s Hospital on Streeterville’s medical campus, or any other facility that can provide immediate treatment. Do not wait to see if symptoms improve on their own.

Once your child is safe, start documenting everything. Ask the daycare for a written incident report and a copy of your child’s allergy care plan on file. Take photos of any food that was served, any packaging, and any visible symptoms your child showed. Write down the names of every staff member who was present. Ask whether an epinephrine auto-injector was used and, if so, which staff member administered it and at what time.

Report the incident to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services. DCFS investigates licensing violations, and a food allergy incident caused by staff negligence may trigger a formal investigation. That investigation can produce records, findings, and documentation that become powerful evidence in a civil lawsuit. You can reach the DCFS reporting hotline at 1-800-252-2873.

Do not give a recorded statement to the daycare’s insurance company before speaking with an attorney. Insurance adjusters work for the insurer, not for your family. Statements made in the early days after an incident can be used to minimize or deny a claim. A prompt investigation of an incident may help uncover evidence of a violation that later could prove vital in a lawsuit. The attorneys at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can begin that investigation immediately, preserving evidence before it disappears.

Damages and Compensation in Chicago Daycare Food Allergy Cases

Parents often wonder what a food allergy injury case is actually worth. The honest answer is that it depends on the severity of the reaction, the lasting effects on the child, and the specific failures by the daycare. What Illinois law does allow families to recover is broad.

Economic damages cover the hard costs: ambulance fees, emergency room treatment, hospitalization, follow-up care with allergists or specialists, prescription epinephrine auto-injectors, and any therapy or counseling the child needs after the trauma. Economic damages cover the medical bills and other out-of-pocket expenses incurred in treating the injuries, and if a child suffers a long-term or permanent disability, parents can recover damages for future treatment and for home modifications or other adaptations required for the disability.

Non-economic damages address the harm that does not come with a receipt. Pain and suffering, emotional distress, fear, and the psychological impact of a near-death experience are all compensable under Illinois law. Young children who survive severe anaphylactic episodes can develop anxiety, PTSD, and food-related phobias that require long-term mental health treatment. Those costs belong in your claim.

In cases where a daycare’s conduct was particularly reckless, such as knowingly ignoring a documented allergy or repeatedly violating state regulations, Illinois law may allow for punitive damages. These are damages designed to punish the wrongdoer and deter similar conduct in the future. They are not available in every case, but they are worth evaluating with an experienced attorney.

Illinois also has a statute of limitations that limits how long you have to file a personal injury lawsuit. For injuries to minors, the clock generally does not begin to run until the child turns 18, but there are exceptions and strategic reasons to act sooner. Evidence fades, witnesses move, and surveillance footage gets deleted. Contacting Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010 as soon as possible after the incident gives your family the best chance of building a strong case.

FAQs About Injuries to Children With Food Allergies at Chicago Daycares

Can I sue a Chicago daycare if my child had an allergic reaction there?

Yes, you may have a valid personal injury claim if the daycare’s negligence caused or contributed to your child’s allergic reaction. Illinois law requires licensed daycares to maintain anaphylaxis plans, keep trained staff on site at all times, and follow individual care plans for children with known allergies. If the daycare violated any of these obligations and your child was harmed, you may be entitled to compensation for medical bills, pain and suffering, and other damages. Every case is different, so speaking with an attorney is the best way to evaluate your specific situation.

What is the Childhood Anaphylactic Policy Act and how does it apply to daycares?

The Childhood Anaphylactic Policy Act, also known as Illinois’s version of Elijah’s Law, was signed into law in August 2021. It requires the Illinois Department of Public Health to establish anaphylaxis policies and procedures for daycare settings across the state. Under this law, every licensed Illinois daycare must have an anaphylaxis response plan and must have at least one staff member trained in recognizing and responding to anaphylaxis present at all times. Daycares must also communicate their allergy policies to parents annually. A daycare that fails to meet these requirements is not only violating state law but may also be liable if a child is harmed as a result.

What evidence do I need to support a food allergy injury claim against a Chicago daycare?

Strong evidence in these cases typically includes the child’s allergy care plan on file at the daycare, the incident report completed by staff, medical records from the emergency room or treating physicians, photographs of the food served, any communications between you and the daycare about your child’s allergy, and records of the daycare’s anaphylaxis plan and staff training. DCFS investigation findings and licensing inspection records can also be powerful. An attorney can help you identify, request, and preserve all relevant evidence before it is lost or destroyed.

What if the daycare says my child’s reaction was unforeseeable?

A daycare that had documented knowledge of your child’s food allergy cannot credibly claim the reaction was unforeseeable. Illinois law holds daycares to a standard of reasonable care, and when a family has disclosed a child’s allergy in writing, the daycare is on notice. Serving that child an unsafe food, failing to check ingredients, or not having epinephrine available are all foreseeable failures that a reasonable daycare would prevent. Even in cases where the specific allergen came from an unexpected source, the question is whether the daycare took reasonable steps to prevent exposure, and that is a fact-specific analysis an attorney can help you work through.

How long do I have to file a lawsuit after my child’s food allergy injury at a Chicago daycare?

In Illinois, the statute of limitations for personal injury claims is generally two years from the date of the injury. However, when the injured person is a minor, Illinois law typically tolls, or pauses, that deadline until the child turns 18. This does not mean you should wait. Evidence disappears, witnesses become unavailable, and surveillance footage is often overwritten within days or weeks. Acting quickly gives your attorney the best chance to investigate the incident, gather evidence, and build the strongest possible claim. Call Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010 for a free consultation as soon as possible after the incident.

More Resources About Injuries to Specific Age Groups and Vulnerable Children

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