When Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced that the Donald Trump administration would reopen investigations into the causes of autism, he promised it would be an “unbiased, depoliticized, gold standard scientific research and academic freedom.” Eventually, they declared that Tylenol during pregnancy is a huge determinant in which infants get autism — now a group of researchers have released possibly the most thorough analysis on the topic yet.
When Trump first announced that his administration had concluded that acetaminophen — the active ingredient in Tylenol — was responsible for autism, he asked Americans to “fight” it. Trump even went further to claim that the reason Cuba does not have any autism is because they don’t have Tylenol. This again was disproven because Tylenol is just a brand that uses acetaminophen; there are multiple painkillers throughout the world that use the ingredient, sometimes with its alternative name of paracetamol.
It was not clear what Trump’s administration based its findings on, but The Lancet Obstetrics, Gynaecology & Women’s Health decided to do their own research just to make sure the findings were aligned with the administration. The first thing they did in their research was remove studies that examined pregnancies where the women did not disclose their health histories. Then they removed studies with women who did not disclose other medication that they happened to be on. Then they removed studies which might have issues of bias, such as asking directly about Tylenol usage. The study focused mainly on studies that used medical records and questionnaires of women using Tylenol during pregnancy.
Out of thousands of studies, only 43 passed the thorough research. The review found no link between acetaminophen and autism. According to NBC, David Mandell, a psychiatry professor at the University of Pennsylvania, said, “I don’t think there’s a better way to analyze the data than this Lancet paper does.” That should satisfy the MAHA faithfuls because it was based on science and studies that already existed.
Another aspect of MAHA beliefs is the claim that healthcare in the US has been politicized. They would use that assumption to justify the firing of top members within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and cozying up to conspiracy theorists. Which, taken at face value, is actually true — it would be rather destructive if the population starts ignoring expert analysis in favor of what a politician says.
But they can rest assured that this has nothing to do with the American two-party system. The study included experts from the UK, Sweden, and Italy — furthermore, they also published the exact three methods they used to get their findings. So interested parties can try and check too if they will end up with the same conclusions. After all, podcasters often encourage their listeners to somehow do their own research, and this is their opportunity.
Mandell reiterated, “No matter which way they analyze them, they find that acetaminophen doesn’t cause ADHD or autism or intellectual disability.” The original study that found a link between Tylenol and autism is attributed to Dr. Andrea Baccarelli, dean of faculty at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; when she was reached to comment on these new findings, she offered no rebuttal.
Published: Jan 17, 2026 12:38 pm