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Meet Vana: Your 24/7 AI Allergy Assistant for Navigating Food Reactivity
Finding blood in your baby's diaper at 2 AM. Staring at ingredient labels, unsure if they contain triggers. Meet Vana, Free to Feed's 24/7 AI assistant providing instant, evidence-informed guidance for families navigating food reactivity. Built with Stanford research and clinical insights, Vana offers personalized support, smart label decoding, and seamless expert connections. Subscribe at freetofeed.com/vana for $12/month.


When Blood and Mucus in Baby's Diaper Signals Food Protein-Induced Allergic Proctocolitis
Blood and mucus in your baby's diaper can signal FPIAP, a non-IgE food allergy affecting the colon. Unlike classic allergies, FPIAP causes delayed reactions 6-48 hours after trigger foods, making it hard to identify without systematic tracking. This comprehensive guide covers symptom recognition, elimination diet strategies, breast milk protein transfer timing, and the encouraging prognosis that many babies achieve tolerance by age 1.


How Do I Know if My Baby Has Food Allergies?
When something is wrong with your baby, it feels like the world stops. Research shows that reactions breastfed babies most often experience are non-IgE mediated food allergies, which operate differently from classic reactions. Your baby isn't allergic to your breast milk, they're reacting to specific food proteins that pass through it.
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