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Updated: Monday, 15 Aug 2011, 4:22 PM EDT
Published : Monday, 15 Aug 2011, 4:00 PM EDT
CHICAGO (AP) - School children with potentially fatal allergies can get help faster because of a new Illinois law.
Gov. Pat Quinn signed the law Monday that now allows schools to stock and use shots to help children having severe allergic reactions by giving them an epinephrine injection.
Quinn signed the law at the Chicago school where a 13-year-old girl died last year after having a severe allergic reaction to food.
The Chicago Democrat says the legislation is about protecting lives. He was joined at the bill-signing ceremony by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan, who praised the legislation as one of the "common-sense things" that can be done to protect children.
The law goes into effect immediately and lets officials at the school administer the allergy shot without fear of liability.
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Six-year-old Etan Patz vanished on May 25, 1979, and has never been found.
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