
New large study refutes autism myth – Trump and Kennedy were wrong in Tylenol statements
New large-scale study refutes autism myth – Trump and Kennedy were wrong in Tylenol statements: 09.07.2026, 05:40
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Summary
Home World New large study refutes autism myth – Trump and Kennedy were wrong in Tylenol statements: 09.07.2026, 05:40 PM Comments Us on Google follow all-clear for pregnant women: The painkiller Tylenol causes according to the new large study, neither autism nor ADHD – Trump and Kennedy were wrong. Loftin continued: “If a link disappears or weakens significantly in sibling comparisons, this suggests that the earlier link was due to common familial factors rather than the drug itself.” The autism analysis included more than 124,000 sibling-matched children, while the ADHD analysis included over 97,000. Experts disagree with him. © The researchers analyzed electronic health records of over 700,000 mother-child couples in Hong Kong between 2001 and 2023.
Furthermore, Results coincide with other studies: No need to worry about painkillers The results are consistent with a large Swedish study published in 2024 in JAMA, which followed nearly 2.5 million children. At an event at the White House in 2025, Trump warned pregnant women against taking Tylenol and hinted it could contribute to higher rates of autism. The researchers found that children exposed to paracetamol — known in the U.S. as acetaminophen and sold under brands such as Tylenol — were no more likely to develop autism or ADHD than their unexposed siblings.
In addition, Trump and Kennedy have repeatedly raised concerns about the use of acetaminophen during pregnancy.
Cross-referenced from 2 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
Home World New large study refutes autism myth – Trump and Kennedy were wrong in Tylenol statements: 09.07.2026, 05:40 PM Comments Us on Google follow all-clear for pregnant women: The painkiller Tylenol causes according to the new large study, neither autism nor ADHD – Trump and Kennedy were wrong.
reliability low1/2 sourcesLoftin continued: “If a link disappears or weakens significantly in sibling comparisons, this suggests that the earlier link was due to common familial factors rather than the drug itself.” The autism analysis included more than 124,000 sibling-matched children, while the ADHD analysis included over 97,000.
reliability low1/2 sourcesExperts disagree with him. © The researchers analyzed electronic health records of over 700,000 mother-child couples in Hong Kong between 2001 and 2023.
reliability low1/2 sourcesResults coincide with other studies: No need to worry about painkillers The results are consistent with a large Swedish study published in 2024 in JAMA, which followed nearly 2.5 million children.
reliability low1/2 sourcesAt an event at the White House in 2025, Trump warned pregnant women against taking Tylenol and hinted it could contribute to higher rates of autism.
reliability low1/2 sourcesThe study was published on 29.
reliability low1/2 sourcesThe researchers found that children exposed to paracetamol — known in the U.S. as acetaminophen and sold under brands such as Tylenol — were no more likely to develop autism or ADHD than their unexposed siblings.
reliability low1/2 sourcesTrump and Kennedy have repeatedly raised concerns about the use of acetaminophen during pregnancy.
reliability low1/2 sources
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
No notable framing divergence.
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.
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