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Reply to "is RKFJr's "Tylenol(TM) causes autism" just a shakedown for extortion money from the company? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I don’t know why all of you are getting worked up over this. You’re free to ingest as much Tylenol as you wish while pregnant. It’s still legal.[/quote] At what point do these recommendations affect what insurance companies will cover or doctors' liability for compliant or non-compliant advice?[/quote] lol DCUM freaking out that Tylenol won’t be covered by insurance. Chefs kiss. [/quote] It's not about insurance coverage. It's about misleading information -- deliberately wrong information. Tylenol is safe in pregnancy. The other options OTC are not, especially past the 30 week time. And untreated fever in pregnancy really IS connected to autism.[/quote] And what will end up happening after this is women leaving fever untreated or thinking "I heard Tylenol is bad, I will take Ibuprofen instead." [/quote] The risk is premature closure of the PDA [i]in utero[/i], leading to fetal death. [b]Tylenol is safe in pregnancy.[/b][/quote] How do you know?[/quote] Because a giant study of 2.5 million children which controlled for genetic and familial factors found that any correlation with autism disappeared once those confounding factors were controlled for. In other words, the correlation found in some studies is related to confounds - genetics of who is more likely to take tylenol due to other predisposing factors. [/quote] That’d be a totally satisfactory response if there weren’t studies pointing in the other direction, but there are. Why don’t you credit those?[/quote] Because those studies do not control for confounding factors. They are lower quality studies. [/quote] They claim they do. One is literally called “Use of Negative Control Exposure Analysis to Evaluate Confounding: An Example of Acetaminophen Exposure and Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder in Nurses' Health Study II.” Can you explain what how they are of lower quality? Or is it just that you’re heard smart people you trust say they’re of lower quality?[/quote] Much smaller sample size, limited to females in the nursing profession, does not account for confounding as well as the swiss study. "However, we cannot rule out the possibility of other uncontrolled risk factors for ADHD that are uniquely correlated with the use of acetaminophen during the pregnancy period" No, not as high quality as the swiss study. [/quote]
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