Pret A Manger ignored 9 warnings about its bread before it killed a 15-year-old

Advertisement
Pret A Manger ignored 9 warnings about its bread before it killed a 15-year-old

Advertisement
pret a manger olive baguette

ITV News/YouTube

An avocado, olive, and tomato baguette at Pret A Manger - similar to the sandwich that killed Natasha Ednan-Laperouse in 2016.

  • A 15-year-old girl died after eating a Pret A Manger sandwich that failed to list an ingredient to which she was allergic.
  • Natasha Ednan-Laperouse died in 2016 after eating a baguette that had sesame seeds.
  • An inquest heard that Pret A Manger received nine complaints of sesame-related allergy incidents in 2015, but still failed to list sesame as an ingredient.
  • The chain now lists all allergens, including sesame, in its products.

Pret A Manger ignored nine warnings that its baguettes could cause deadly allergic reactions until it killed a 15-year-old girl, an inquest has heard.

Natasha Ednan-Laperouse, who suffered from numerous allergies, suffered a cardiac arrest and died after eating an artichoke, olive, and tapenade baguette in July 2016, the BBC reported on Wednesday.

One of the ingredients that triggered the cardiac arrest was sesame, which was present in the baguette but not labeled.

Ednan-Laperouse, from London, bought the sandwich at Heathrow Airport before flying to Nice on summer holiday, the BBC said.

Advertisement

She collapsed about 20 minutes into the flight, suffered a cardiac arrest, and died within hours.

Her father, Nadim Ednan-Laperouse, said his daughter foamed at the mouth and said she couldn't breathe, according to Sky News. The symptoms persisted despite Nadim's administering two EpiPen shots to Natasha and a doctor's carrying out CPR for the rest of the plane ride.

But Ednan-Laperouse was not the only victim of allergens in Pret A Manger's products.

The global food chain received nine complaints of sesame-related allergy incidents in the year before Ednan-Laperouse died, the inquest heard, according to the BBC.

One of the cases involved a woman nearly dying after suffering an anaphylactic shock from a baguette in 2015, the BBC reported. Her family warned Pret A Manger about the ingredients, but the chain still failed to label its sandwiches with allergy information.

Advertisement

pret a manger baguette

Neil Hall/Reuters

Products at a Pret A Manger branch in London in April 2017.

The chain now lists all its allergens, including sesame, in its products, ITV News reported.

Business Insider has contacted Pret A Manger for further comment.

Jonathan Perkins, the company's director of risk and compliance, was quoted by 5 News as saying: "I accept that a number of individuals have had a negative experience, even a tragic experience, but thousands of customers and allergy sufferers shop with us safely."

Earlier this year British advertising regulators banned Pret A Manger from claiming its food is "natural" because the chain uses additives in its products.

Advertisement
{{}}