Food allergies are on the rise worldwide, and for many people they bring more than inconvenience — they can be life-threatening. But with new treatments and growing recognition of the role of gut health, are we getting closer to real solutions?
A food allergy is when the immune system misidentifies certain proteins in food as harmful invaders. Common triggers include:
Cow’s milk
Eggs
Peanuts & tree nuts
Wheat
Shellfish
Sesame
It’s important to distinguish allergies from intolerances:
Allergies involve the immune system, and even trace exposure can trigger severe reactions.
Intolerances mainly affect digestion, causing bloating, discomfort, or skin flare-ups.
This confusion often masks the real story — our immune system and our gut are inseparable. And when the gut is imbalanced, our tolerance to foods is often compromised.
Food allergy reactions vary from mild to life-threatening:
Itchy skin, lips, or throat
Swelling of the face, lips, or eyes
Digestive distress such as nausea or diarrhoea
Severe reactions (anaphylaxis) requiring adrenaline injections
By contrast, intolerances tend to cause slower-onset digestive symptoms, often linked to a sluggish or inflamed gut.
In the US, 32 million people now live with food allergies.
UK hospital admissions for food-related anaphylaxis have risen 154% in the last 20 years.
Across Europe, experts predict 50% of the population will experience some form of allergic disease by 2025.
Research increasingly points to the gut microbiome as the missing link. Antibiotics, highly processed diets, and reduced fibre intake have shifted the bacterial communities that train our immune system. Without a robust gut environment, foods once tolerated can suddenly become threats.
That’s why restoring gut balance is essential — and why Flush GBI was designed to help cleanse, reset, and optimise digestive health, creating the foundation for greater resilience.
High-profile tragedies such as the case that led to Natasha’s Law (UK, 2021) have shown the importance of awareness and labelling. But prevention goes deeper than labels. It requires nurturing the gut environment where immune tolerance begins.
Traditional approaches include:
Strict avoidance of allergens
Antihistamines for mild reactions
Emergency medication (e.g. EpiPen) for severe reactions
Newer therapies offer hope:
Oral Immunotherapy (OIT) — gradual exposure to allergens to build tolerance
Desensitisation patches — safer ways of introducing tiny doses
Biologic medicines — dampening overreactions of the immune system
But these treatments still manage rather than cure. If they stop, tolerance often fades.
The future of allergy research is pointing towards:
Early exposure to common allergens in infancy, not avoidance
Supporting the microbiome through high-fibre diets, diverse plant foods, and gut-nourishing routines
Restoring digestive resilience with cleansing protocols such as Flush GBI, which help clear toxic build-up and support healthy bacterial diversity
By strengthening the gut and reducing chronic inflammation, we improve our chances of training the immune system to recognise food as nourishment — not threat.
While there is no permanent cure for food allergies yet, we are moving closer through immunotherapy, biologics, and microbiome research. In the meantime, taking steps to support gut health is one of the most practical defences we have.
With products like Flush GBI, which are designed to cleanse and reset the gut, we can give the body a stronger foundation — reducing triggers, calming inflammation, and potentially lowering the risks that lead to food hypersensitivities in the first place.