Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear that if Trump said drinking lots of water was good for kids some of you would dehydrate your own offspring to death.
If Trump was accurately quoting medical advice people might follow it. He's not a doctor and in this case was not quoting medical advice and frequently states things so inaccurately that he is giving bad advice--drinking too much water can be toxic.
Thank you for proving the point. Merely giving advice that thousands of pediatricians give every day about proper hydration would lead people like you to think he was recommending toxic amounts of water. What is wrong with you, seriously?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s wild to ignore treatment developments for your child because you don’t like that someone you hate talked about it. Didn’t you take prenatal vitamins when pregnant? Folate has long been known to be important for brain development.
It's understandable given the source. But just ignore RFK and Trump and look at the existing information and studies.
Which are not at all enough to say anything. The main trial was 40 kids.
Wow, approving a drug with a 40 person trial is nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, there’s not much in the way of harm here. Folate is water soluble so if it’s too much you just pee it out. Worth a try anyway.
The limited study they did suggests there are potential behavioral side effects to this drug. So, yes, it could negatively impact kids.
So stop if it does. The sky is not falling here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear that if Trump said drinking lots of water was good for kids some of you would dehydrate your own offspring to death.
If Trump was accurately quoting medical advice people might follow it. He's not a doctor and in this case was not quoting medical advice and frequently states things so inaccurately that he is giving bad advice--drinking too much water can be toxic.
Sounds like CNN talking points. Did you even watch the press conference?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear that if Trump said drinking lots of water was good for kids some of you would dehydrate your own offspring to death.
If Trump was accurately quoting medical advice people might follow it. He's not a doctor and in this case was not quoting medical advice and frequently states things so inaccurately that he is giving bad advice--drinking too much water can be toxic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear that if Trump said drinking lots of water was good for kids some of you would dehydrate your own offspring to death.
If Trump was accurately quoting medical advice people might follow it. He's not a doctor and in this case was not quoting medical advice and frequently states things so inaccurately that he is giving bad advice--drinking too much water can be toxic.
Thank you for proving the point. Merely giving advice that thousands of pediatricians give every day about proper hydration would lead people like you to think he was recommending toxic amounts of water. What is wrong with you, seriously?
Anonymous wrote:The real question is if the problem is related to folate, why are so many mothers folate deficient? Is there a solution like they found for spinal bifida? Are Autism and Spinal Bifida related?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, there’s not much in the way of harm here. Folate is water soluble so if it’s too much you just pee it out. Worth a try anyway.
The limited study they did suggests there are potential behavioral side effects to this drug. So, yes, it could negatively impact kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, there’s not much in the way of harm here. Folate is water soluble so if it’s too much you just pee it out. Worth a try anyway.
Then you might as well just buy folate (not folic acid) supplements at the drugstore and have the person with autism take that.
And? Ibuprofen etc. come in prescription form too, when you could just take 4 regular ones. Whatever.
This is why we all have to deal with ridiculous insurance company prior authorization rules. Because people who DON'T NEED prescriptions insist on getting them, when they cost 10x as much and may not work. (Prescription ibuprofen does NOT cost more than generic ibuprofen, but Leucovorin costs $1-2 per pill compared to a methyl folate supplement for about 10 cents.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I swear that if Trump said drinking lots of water was good for kids some of you would dehydrate your own offspring to death.
If Trump was accurately quoting medical advice people might follow it. He's not a doctor and in this case was not quoting medical advice and frequently states things so inaccurately that he is giving bad advice--drinking too much water can be toxic.
Anonymous wrote:I swear that if Trump said drinking lots of water was good for kids some of you would dehydrate your own offspring to death.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, there’s not much in the way of harm here. Folate is water soluble so if it’s too much you just pee it out. Worth a try anyway.
Then you might as well just buy folate (not folic acid) supplements at the drugstore and have the person with autism take that.
And? Ibuprofen etc. come in prescription form too, when you could just take 4 regular ones. Whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, there’s not much in the way of harm here. Folate is water soluble so if it’s too much you just pee it out. Worth a try anyway.
Then you might as well just buy folate (not folic acid) supplements at the drugstore and have the person with autism take that.