How does the system work?
Start as early as 4 months of age

Introduce
Top 3 Allergens

MAINTAIN
Top 3 Allergens

Grow
Top 9 Allergens

Introduce
Top 3 Allergens

MAINTAIN
Top 3 Allergens

Grow
Top 9 Allergens

Introduce
Top 3 Allergens
First 30 days of system

Egg

milk

Peanut
- Introduce peanut, egg and cow’s milk, one at a time
- Mixes easily in bottle (breastmilk or formula) or food
- Start as early as 4 months of age
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Maintain
Top 3 Allergens
Next 5 months of system

Egg

milk

Peanut
- Maintain daily exposure to peanut, egg, and cow’s milk for at least 5 months
- Mixes easily in bottle (breastmilk or formula) or food
- Start as early as 4 months of age
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Grow
9 Top Allergens
6 months (minimum) - 18 months of system

Egg

milk

Peanut

Almond

Cashew

Wheat

Walnut

Soy

Peanut
- Expand exposure to 9 top allergens for 6 months (minimum) - 18 months
- Mixes easily into cereal, yogurt, pureed food, etc.
- Start when baby is consistently eating solids
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Top 9 Allergens: Introduce early and often

Soy

Wheat

Sesame

Peanut

Egg

Milk

Cashew

Almond

Walnut
Why Ready. Set. Food!?
Inspired by kids. Developed by allergists. Loved by parents.
A safe and easy way to introduce their babies early and help them achieve a healthier future.
Ready. Set. Food! is a complete guided system that can start as early as 4 months of age, introducing babies to 9 top allergens across 3 stages. The first 6 months will be a gently staged introduction of the top 3 allergens - peanut, egg, milk - with Stage 1+2. After which, stage 3 will maintain Peanut, Egg, Milk and then grow exposure to the next 6 top allergens – Cashew, Almond, Walnut, Sesame, Soy, Wheat.





From The AAAAI & USDA Guidelines Report
What is the evidence supporting the introduction of potentially allergenic foods (like peanut and egg) and the development of food allergies?
Recommendations:
- Start feeding highly allergenic foods, like peanut and egg, at 4-6 months of age
- Do not deliberately delay the introduction of other potentially allergenic foods, like cow’s milk, soy, and wheat
- Once allergenic foods are introduced, regular feeding should be maintained
More Guidelines
What Health Care Providers Are Saying About Ready. Set. Food!











