Trump’s False Claim About Tylenol and Autism: Why Pregnant Women Deserve Better Facts
(Updated September 24, 2025) - In a concerning move on Monday, Donald Trump, alongside Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Dr. Mehmet Oz, publicly advised women to avoid paracetamol (acetaminophen, or Tylenol) during pregnancy due to a purported link with childhood autism. This claim is not supported by credible scientific evidence and exemplifies a dangerous pattern of misinformation impacting maternal health.
This isn’t simply a political statement; it’s a stark illustration of a systemic problem. Pregnant women and their developing babies are consistently underserved by incomplete, flawed, or missing medical data. they deserve accurate, evidence-based guidance, not fear-mongering headlines based on shaky research.
The Core Issue: Blaming Mothers,Ignoring Science
Trump’s announcement went further,framing a woman’s choices as directly responsible for her child’s neurodevelopment. The implication – that women should “tough it out” rather than treat pain or fever – is not onyl insensitive but fundamentally flawed.It falsely pits a mother’s well-being against










