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Allergy Clinic

Service

  • The allergy service offers diagnosis and management of allergies including allergy diagnostic testing, avoidance education, auto injector training and food challenges when applicable.  A multidisciplinary allergy clinic is held weekly at RHCYP attended by Professor Jurgen Schwarze, Dr Helen Rhodes, Dr David Cordiner, Dr Aziz Sheikh, Juliet Dykes and Vicky McConnachie Allergy Nurse Specialists and Maria Mitchell, Specialist Paediatric Allergy Dietitian.  The joint clinic usually provides a one-stop service offering skin prick testing and dietetic advice alongside a medical consultation. 
  • The service also provides weekly clinics at St John’s Hospital
  • A Nurse led allergy clinic is available twice weekly
  • A dietetic led allergy clinic is available fortnightly.

Who to refer:

  • Children with anaphylaxis, i.e. allergy symptoms that affect breathing (cough, wheeze, stridor or breathlessness), the gut (severe prolonged vomiting) or the circulation (faintness, floppiness or signs of shock, collapse)
  • Children with food allergies who receive regular asthma preventative treatment and/or poorly controlled asthma
  • Poorly controlled allergic rhinitis only after a trial of daily nasal steroid spray together with a daily non-sedating antihistamine for a minimum of 3 months.
  • Where diagnosis is not clear and needs to be confirmed or excluded
  • Children with suspected food allergy who also have severe eczema
  • Multiple food allergies
  • Systemic insect sting reactions

Who not to refer:

  • People over the age of 18 years.
  • Single uncomplicated food allergies, i.e. not anaphylaxis.  These patients may be referred to the General Medical Pediatric Service if not able to be managed in Primary Care
  • Minor reactions to foods such as strawberries, tomatoes and aubergines are common and do not generally need referral into the allergy service Oral Allergy Syndrome
  • Egg allergy Egg Allergy
  • Single urticarial reactions without obvious triggers
  • Non-allergic chronic urticaria
  • Well controlled Allergic Rhinitis, Asthma or Eczema
  • Mild to moderate eczema without obvious allergic trigger
  • Localized insect sting reactions
  • Delayed type food allergy presenting primarily with gastrointestinal symptoms

How to refer

  • Referrals should be made via SCI gateway
  • For patients within the city of Edinburgh, East and Midlothian, please refer to:

RHCYP > Allergy Services > LI Allergy Basic Referral

  • For patients within West Lothian, please refer to:

SJH > Medical Paediatrics > LI Allergy Basic Referral

Essential information to include in referral:

  • Symptoms of allergic reaction
  • Suspected triggers
  • Timing between trigger exposure and onset of symptoms.