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‘Kind-Souled’ Boy, 5, Died from Allergic Reaction After Eating Biscuit at School

A 5-year-old boy died after suffering a fatal allergic reaction at school, an inquest has confirmed. Benedict Blythe, who was allergic to milk, eggs, and nuts, died in December 2021 after eating a biscuit he had brought from home to Barnack Primary School in Lincolnshire, multiple outlets including Peterborough Today, The Independent, and The Times reported.

During the inquest, Coroner Elizabeth Gray said Benedict died of food-induced anaphylaxis. He also had a history of chronic asthma, which may have complicated the emergency response.

“Benedict was five years old at the time of his death,” Gray said. “He suffered from asthma and a number of allergies, including milk and egg.”

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According to testimony, Benedict had stayed home from school on November 30, 2021, after vomiting the night before. He returned to school the next morning and ate a biscuit from home, after which he vomited again around 10:30 a.m. and was sent outside. There, he collapsed.

A teaching assistant trained in first aid administered an adrenaline auto-injector, but Benedict did not respond. CPR was initiated until emergency services arrived. He was later pronounced dead at Peterborough City Hospital.

Initially, a post-mortem examination attributed his death to asthma. But Dr. Emilia Wawrzkowicz, a pediatric consultant, challenged that conclusion.

“I strongly believed it was anaphylaxis,” she told the inquest. “There was never any suggestion of airway compromise typical of an asthma attack.”

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As a result, Benedict’s official cause of death was corrected to food-induced anaphylaxis, according to the area coroner.

Benedict’s mother, Helen Blythe, 37, shared that vomiting was typically the first sign of her son’s allergic reactions, though the progression varied. She noted that the family had provided the school with a detailed allergy management plan, outlining how to respond in case of a reaction.

“I was terrified when the school called to say he was unwell,” she said.

Speaking through tears, Helen described her son as a bright, compassionate child who navigated his condition with quiet strength.

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“He lived with allergies and chronic asthma, and sometimes that meant missing out — on birthday parties, on snacks other children could eat, on ice creams from the ice cream van — but he never let it define him,” she told the court.

“His superpower was his kind heart, and it’s that kindness that is so missing from our lives.”

Barnack Primary School has not publicly commented on the incident.

The inquest shines a renewed spotlight on school allergy protocols, raising difficult questions about emergency preparedness and the importance of clear, enforced response plans for children with life-threatening allergies.

Published inADVENTURE

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