Delayed Epinephrine Administration During Snack
A childcare centre experienced an allergic reaction during snack time when a child with a known allergy developed coughing and hives. Staff initially monitored symptoms rather than administering epinephrine. Symptoms escalated, requiring emergency intervention. The review found uncertainty about symptom thresholds and hesitation to act. Procedures were updated to reinforce immediate epinephrine use and refresher training was provided. The incident highlighted how hesitation increases risk during allergic emergencies.This content is for CoAction Insurance policy holders.
To request portal access, send an email to losscontrol@coactionspecialty.com with “Coaction LC Portal” in the subject line and include your policy number in the email body.
New Safety Talks
New Safety Talks
wpengine2026-03-14T14:19:53-07:00
Infant & Toddler Sleep Safety Reducing Sids And Nap-Time Risks Meeting Kit – French
wpengine2026-03-14T14:19:44-07:00
Infant & Toddler Sleep Safety Reducing Sids And Nap-Time Risks Meeting Kit – Spanish
wpengine2026-03-14T14:19:34-07:00
Infant & Toddler Sleep Safety Reducing Sids And Nap-Time Risks Meeting Kit
wpengine2026-03-11T20:35:56-07:00
Medication, Allergies, and Anaphylaxis: What Every Educator Must Know Meeting Kit – French
wpengine2026-03-11T20:35:38-07:00
Medication, Allergies, and Anaphylaxis: What Every Educator Must Know Meeting Kit – Spanish
wpengine2026-03-11T20:31:57-07:00
Medication, Allergies, and Anaphylaxis: What Every Educator Must Know Meeting Kit
New eLearning
wpengine2026-03-14T14:16:30-07:00

