
Tylenol orders for some pregnant women fell after Trump warned them not to take it
NBC News
After President Trump told pregnant women not to take Tylenol, orders for it declined among pregnant women who visited emergency rooms, according to new research.
After President Donald Trump told pregnant women to “fight like hell” not to take Tylenol, orders for it declined among pregnant women who visited emergency departments, according to data published Thursday in the medical journal The Lancet.
Trump announced on Sept. 22 that the Food and Drug Administration would warn physicians about a potential link between Tylenol use in pregnancy and autism in children.
“Don’t take Tylenol if you’re pregnant,” he said.
The risk has not been substantiated by robust scientific evidence, and the actual letter that the FDA sent doctors said the subject was “an ongoing area of scientific debate.” A January analysis of existing research on the subject— one of the most thorough to date — found no link between Tylenol use in pregnancy and neurodevelopmental disorders, including autism.
To investigate the impact of Trump’s comments, a pair of researchers — at Harvard Medical School and Brown University — used electronic health records to compare the number of Tylenol prescriptions for pregnant patients who visited emergency departments from Sept. 22 to Dec. 7 to prescriptions ordered in the nearly three months leading up to Trump’s announcement.

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