Health10/2/2025The Guardian

How the White House used studies with ‘weak’ evidence to tie Tylenol to autism

How the White House used studies with ‘weak’ evidence to tie Tylenol to autism

The White House recently claimed that the use of acetaminophen (Tylenol) during pregnancy can cause autism, citing scientific studies. However, experts have criticized this assertion, stating that the evidence presented is "weak" and "inconclusive". Physicians with expertise in reviewing medical research have criticized the White House's approach, arguing that it presents "association as causation" and is based on "poor quality studies". Jeffrey Singer, a surgeon and senior fellow at the Cato Institute, has stated that the links in the White House press release indicate a political spin on the issue. The article suggests that the White House has oversimplified the complex relationship between acetaminophen use and autism, and that more rigorous scientific evidence is needed to support such a claim.

Source: For the complete article, please visit the original source link below.

Related Articles

Landmark study shows 1.4m Britons have a gambling problem
🏥 Health6h ago1 min read

Landmark study shows 1.4m Britons have a gambling problem

Pharmacies can issue UTI drugs without GP visit
🏥 Health6h ago1 min read

Pharmacies can issue UTI drugs without GP visit

‘Everything that is wrong with the human race’: inside Hollywood’s bizarre war on the leaf blower
🏥 Health7h ago1 min read

‘Everything that is wrong with the human race’: inside Hollywood’s bizarre war on the leaf blower

Blackburn MP’s baby was target of ‘depraved’ online abuse hours after being born
🏥 Health10h ago1 min read

Blackburn MP’s baby was target of ‘depraved’ online abuse hours after being born

Inquiry into why man was given cancer treatment for 16 years
🏥 Health13h ago1 min read

Inquiry into why man was given cancer treatment for 16 years

Heart surgeon's failures contributed to multiple deaths
🏥 Health13h ago1 min read

Heart surgeon's failures contributed to multiple deaths