Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Archie can go into anaphylactic shock if touched by someone who has been eating peanuts

The number of people admitted to hospital for allergic reactions has doubled across Wales in eight years.

In 2010, 801 people sought treatment - up to 1,628, in 2018, figures from the health boards in Wales have shown.

Charlotte Murphy, the mother of Archie, seven, who has an egg and nut allergy, is campaigning for a change in how schools deal with allergies.

The Welsh Government said schools were given guidance and adrenaline auto-injectors could be kept on site.

But Ms Murphy, from Cardiff, said since September 2019 her son Archie has left school more than 60 times with "visible signs of having an allergic reaction" such as hives and rashes.

"I felt that somebody needed to be accountable for the actions school take, or the lack of actions that they take, when it comes to children with food allergies," she told Wales Live.

"I don't want my son to be an example of a tragedy."

Image caption Charlotte Murphy set up Archie's Allergies after her son was diagnosed with egg and nut allergies

Archie first showed an allergic reaction to eggs when he was a baby and his parents fed him scrambled eggs as part of weaning.

When he was four, he went into anaphylactic shock - an extreme reaction which is a medical emergency - after his cousin touched him after eating peanuts, prompting him being rushed to hospital.

He was subsequently diagnosed with his allergies and Ms Murphy has since set up a charity, Archie's Allergies, to help other families.

She said there were still times when Archie comes home from school showing signs of having had a reaction and has not been given medicine.

Common causes of severe allergic reactions include foods such as nuts, dairy products and shellfish but they can also be triggered by insect stings, medicines and pollen.

What does an allergic reaction look like?

Image caption Archie has been sent home from school more than 60 times in six months with reactions such as hives

Symptoms include:

Sneezing and a runny or blocked nose

Red, itchy, watery eyes

Wheezing and coughing

A red, itchy red rash

Swollen lips, tongue, eyes or face

Stomach pain and sickness or diarrhoea

Worsening of asthma or eczema symptoms

Most allergic reactions are mild, but occasionally a severe reaction called anaphylaxis or anaphylactic shock can occur which needs urgent treatment. These symptoms include:

Feeling lightheaded or faint

Breathing difficulties - such as fast, shallow breathing

Wheezing

A fast heartbeat

Clammy skin

Confusion and anxiety

Collapsing or losing consciousness

Source: NHS

Image caption Archie's arms can get covered in hives during a reaction

Dr Tariq El-Shanawany, consultant clinical immunologist at Cardiff and Vale health board, said: "We've been seeing an increase in rates of allergies for a large number of years.

"Urban environments have a higher rate of allergy than rural environments and there may be a role of reduction of infections in that - but of course that's good that we no longer see the rates of childhood deaths from infections that we used to.

"I think what we want to do is maintain the improvements that we have seen in public health and reduce the risk of allergies, so certainly being out and about in nature, in green spaces or out in the countryside would be beneficial for many reasons including reduction of risk of allergy."