Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ACV in water will kill a fever just as good as a Tylenol.
Doubtful. I suspect that drinking cold water has more to do with temporarily reducing a fever than vinegar. It is extremely important to treat a fever in pregnancy and you shouldn't trust some random internet remedy to do the job. Take a tepid bath if you can't bring yourself to medicate for a fever during pregnancy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thing drives me crazy.
I am the mom of 5 NT kids and one ASD kid. I tried to avoid all meds during pregnancy, but am allergic to advil and aspirin, and had occasional migraines. So I did take very limited Tylenol in my pregnancies.
The dc that has asd, I took it maybe twice. One of my dc's, I had cluster migraines and took it much more, and they are NT.
As a mom of an autistic person, I'm so tired of being blamed for that. First off, my dc is amazing. Secondly, yes, I took a tylenol. I ate a hot dog. I'm old. , ect ect ect ...all ways I have heard to blame the pregnant person.
In reality, the far far far most likely reason for it is genetics. Just like for almost everything else. It is dx more now as we are more aware of it, but we all have that 'quirky' or unique relative in the family tree, who was probably not dx.
No, not joining any lawsuit.
+1. I ate the allergy foods, too. Then the DC comes into the world with food allergies and they try to blame the mom.
Totally feel this. One of my kids has a nut allergy with no family history. I was pregnant with her during the “don’t eat PB” while pregnant period and “wait to give it to babies.” Boom, nut allergy. Of course they have reversed all this now and I feel like I totally screwed her for life, even though I did what I was “supposed” to at the time. I am still resentful they have that recommendation without being sure, clearly.
PP, I ate PB all through pregnancy and while nursing, and gave it to baby at 6 months. Boom, anaphylaxis and a peanut allergy. We have no allergies on either side of the family either. The truth is that they still don’t fully know why the allergies occur. But it’s always the default to blame moms, just in case…
Anonymous wrote:For Tylenol to cause autism, your child probably needs to have predisposition genes for autism, and you probably need to take it for a relatively long length of time. I find it improbable that one or two days of advil would grossly affect neurodevelopment.
Infection during pregnancy, and particularly influenza, has also been linked to autism.
Anonymous wrote:For Tylenol to cause autism, your child probably needs to have predisposition genes for autism, and you probably need to take it for a relatively long length of time. I find it improbable that one or two days of advil would grossly affect neurodevelopment.
Infection during pregnancy, and particularly influenza, has also been linked to autism.
Anonymous wrote:ACV in water will kill a fever just as good as a Tylenol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This whole thing drives me crazy.
I am the mom of 5 NT kids and one ASD kid. I tried to avoid all meds during pregnancy, but am allergic to advil and aspirin, and had occasional migraines. So I did take very limited Tylenol in my pregnancies.
The dc that has asd, I took it maybe twice. One of my dc's, I had cluster migraines and took it much more, and they are NT.
As a mom of an autistic person, I'm so tired of being blamed for that. First off, my dc is amazing. Secondly, yes, I took a tylenol. I ate a hot dog. I'm old. , ect ect ect ...all ways I have heard to blame the pregnant person.
In reality, the far far far most likely reason for it is genetics. Just like for almost everything else. It is dx more now as we are more aware of it, but we all have that 'quirky' or unique relative in the family tree, who was probably not dx.
No, not joining any lawsuit.
+1. I ate the allergy foods, too. Then the DC comes into the world with food allergies and they try to blame the mom.
Totally feel this. One of my kids has a nut allergy with no family history. I was pregnant with her during the “don’t eat PB” while pregnant period and “wait to give it to babies.” Boom, nut allergy. Of course they have reversed all this now and I feel like I totally screwed her for life, even though I did what I was “supposed” to at the time. I am still resentful they have that recommendation without being sure, clearly.
PP, I ate PB all through pregnancy and while nursing, and gave it to baby at 6 months. Boom, anaphylaxis and a peanut allergy. We have no allergies on either side of the family either. The truth is that they still don’t fully know why the allergies occur. But it’s always the default to blame moms, just in case…
Anonymous wrote:Please don’t fear monger without heeding the data:
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/pregnant-women-heres-one-less-thing-to-worry-about/
Anonymous wrote:ACV in water will kill a fever just as good as a Tylenol.