Home Health Pictured: Hannah Jacobs, 13, the schoolgirl with a severe dairy allergy who died after drinking a Costa Coffee hot chocolate “made with milk, not soya”.

Pictured: Hannah Jacobs, 13, the schoolgirl with a severe dairy allergy who died after drinking a Costa Coffee hot chocolate “made with milk, not soya”.

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An inquest into the death of 13-year-old Hannah Jacobs from London is due to begin next week. Image: Leigh Day

Hannah Jacobs, the 13-year-old girl with a severe dairy allergy who died after being served Costa Coffee hot chocolate supposedly made from cow’s milk, has been photographed for the first time.

In the heartbreaking image, the schoolgirl is seen beaming with a smile, holding huge gold and bronze birthday balloons in the shape of the numbers ‘1’ and ‘3’.

She wears a purple sash and pinned to her pretty white patterned dress is an oversized badge with the number “13.”

Hannah, from Barking, east London, died on February 8 last year after a suspected anaphylactic reaction to a hot chocolate drink.

Her mother ordered herself and Hannah a hot chocolate from the local Costa Coffee before heading to a dentist appointment.

An inquest into the death of 13-year-old Hannah Jacobs from London is due to begin next week. Image: Leigh Day

Hannah, from Barking, east London, died on February 8 last year after a suspected anaphylactic reaction to a hot chocolate drink sold by Costa Coffee (file image)

Hannah, from Barking, east London, died on February 8 last year after a suspected anaphylactic reaction to a hot chocolate drink sold by Costa Coffee (file image)

Hannah had severe allergies to dairy, eggs, fish and wheat, which she had been diagnosed with as a young child and had been well managed by her family throughout her life.

According to law firm Leigh Day, Hannah’s mother informed the barista about her daughter’s dairy allergy.

But when Hannah took a sip of the drink in the waiting room of the dental office, she immediately told her mother that the drink had not been made with soy milk.

The couple then ran to a nearby pharmacy for help, where staff gave Hannah an EpipPen, an emergency treatment designed to combat a potentially life-threatening allergic reaction.

But despite this and the fact that an ambulance arrived shortly afterwards to take her to the hospital, resuscitation attempts were unsuccessful.

Hannah was pronounced dead at 1 p.m. that day.

An inquest will be held at East London Coroner’s Court on Monday.

Nadim Ednan-Laperouse was travelling home with his daughter Natasha (pictured), when she suffered a life-threatening reaction to nuts during a return flight from a dream trip to Nice on July 17, 2016.

Nadim Ednan-Laperouse was travelling home with his daughter Natasha (pictured), when she suffered a life-threatening reaction to nuts during a return flight from a dream trip to Nice on July 17, 2016.

It is expected to last a week and will examine how Hannah died through testimony from 11 witnesses and experts.

Costa Coffee has been contacted for comment.

Experts estimate that 10 Britons die each year from food allergic reactions and that 5,000 people are hospitalised for severe reactions.

The latest Government figures suggest that around 2.4 million adults are living with a food allergy in the UK, and that hospital admissions for severe reactions have more than tripled in the past 20 years.

Allergies can cause a variety of symptoms, but the most serious is a dangerous inflammation of the airways called anaphylaxis.

This can make breathing difficult or even impossible and can cause the body to go into a cardiac emergency, such as cardiac arrest, due to lack of oxygen.

Children with allergies are considered to be at particular risk of severe reactions because, due to their smaller body size, small amounts of allergens cause larger reactions.

Allergies are also often discovered in childhood, meaning parents may not have an emergency injection on hand if an allergic reaction occurs.

Bereaved families of those who have lost children to allergic reactions have repeatedly called on the Government to appoint an allergy tsar to improve NHS services and allergy awareness, to prevent avoidable illness and death.

Recently, more than 50 activists and experts, including former Towie star Megan McKenna and the island of love Jack Fowler said the country was not doing enough to support the millions of Britons living with allergies.

In the open letter, the coalition said the lack of a national allergy leader has been raised “time and again by coroners at inquests” into those who have died from severe reactions, even to products they believed to be safe.

However, of the 45 such leaders Appointed by NHS England, which cover issues ranging from obesity to autism, none are dedicated to supporting people living with allergies.

The issue of allergies and the danger they pose to children has been in the spotlight since the death of Natasha Ednan-Laperouse.

His father was forced look helplessly as the A 15-year-old boy died after suffering an allergic reaction to a Pret sandwich during a flight from Nice.

The artichoke, olive and tapenade baguette sandwich was later found to contain a hidden amount of sesame seeds that were not declared on the packaging. Natasha was allergic to nuts.

WHAT IS ANAPHYLACTIC SHOCK?

Anaphylaxis, also known as anaphylactic shock, can kill within minutes.

It is a severe and potentially life-threatening reaction to a trigger, such as an allergy.

The reaction can often be triggered by certain foods, including peanuts and shellfish.

However, some medications, bee stings and even the latex used in condoms can also cause a life-threatening reaction.

According to the NHS, it occurs when the immune system overreacts to a trigger.

Symptoms include: feeling dizzy or faint; breathing difficulties (such as rapid, shallow breathing); wheezing; fast heartbeat; clammy skin; confusion and anxiety; and collapse or loss of consciousness.

It is considered a medical emergency and requires immediate treatment.

Insect bites are not dangerous for most victims, but a person does not necessarily have to have a pre-existing condition to be in danger.

A progressive accumulation of bites can cause a person to develop an allergy, and a subsequent bite can trigger an anaphylactic reaction.

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