
For decades, Discussion around autism was foci for unreasoning, misinterpretation and bad science, ranging from a long discredited link between neurodelupmentary condition and vaccine, in recent gluten and avoiding ultra-processed foods can reverse autistic properties.
On Monday evening, this spectrum appeared in an oval office, such as President Donald Trump announced the new Push to study the causes of autism with claims that the common patient tylenol, otherwise known as acetaminophen, can cause a state. The FDA then announced that the medicine would be a slap with a warning label called “Possible Association”.
David Amaral, Professor and the Director of the UC Davis Institute, was among those who died as the president launched in diarrhicus about Tylenol, in several times the pregnant women not to take it, even for the treatment of the blower.
“We heard that the President says that women should flow,” Amaral says. “I’m really confiscated because we know that the past, especially the risk factor for autism. That’s why I worry that this will don’t take Tylenol to make the conversely they hope.”
Speculation that surrounds Tylenol stems from correlations drawn in some studies that agreed to the Association between the use of hospitals and neurodeval disorders. One such analysis was published last month. The problem says Renee Gardner, an epidemiologist on the Caroline Institute in Sweden, whether these studies often reach this conclusion because there are not enough for what statistics describe as “those who may affect those who can affect the relationship between them.
Specifically, Gardner points out that pregnant women who need to take Tylenol more likely to have pain, fever and prenatal infections, which are very risk factors for autism. More importantly, given the heritage of autism, many of the genetic variants make women more likely to reduce immunity and greater perception of pain, and therefore they use hospitals such as acetaminophens, are also connected to autism. Use against hospital, she says, red herring.
Last year, Gardner and other scientists published what is widely considered a scientific field as the most declaring investigation so far on the subject, the one who has done an account for confusing factors. Using health records with nearly 2.5 million children in Sweden, they reached the opposite conclusion to the President: Tylenol has nothing to do with autism. Another great study of more than 200,000 children in Japan was published earlier this month, also did not find a relationship.
Doctors are worried that Trump allegations will have harmful consequences. Michael APTOLOW, Pediatric Advisor for Neurodiciness and Explorer in Pediatric Neuros at the King College London, says it will fear that pregnant women will start using other painkillers with a less checked security profile.
Gardner is worried that it will also lead to self-crying among parents, Flashback until the 1950s and 60s, time when autism is wrongly attributed to emotionally cold “mothers of cold.” “They make parents of children with neurodeval conditions feel responsible,” she says. “Harks return to the wounds of the dark days of psychiatry.”




