News live: Trump’s autism claims ‘cruel’ to pregnant women, Australia’s former chief medical officer says | Australia news

Former CMO Paul Kelly: Trump’s announcement ‘cruel’ to pregnant women

Natasha May

Australia’s former chief medical officer says the Trump administration’s announcement tying paracetamol to autism is “cruel” to pregnant women and unnecessarily puts blame on parents of children with autism, without evidence backing it up.

Prof Paul Kelly told Guardian Australia he believed the announcement was a use of “mal-information” – twisting information to reach a certain end:

I don’t think it’s about protecting children from autism. I do worry that it’s part of a smoke screen for larger announcements which may well involve vaccines, which has been a long-held view of the current secretary for health in the Trump administration, Robert F Kennedy Jr.

Prof Paul Kelly
Prof Paul Kelly. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Kelly also said the announcement goes against the best evidence we have, which was a Swedish study published last year of almost 2.5 million births, “essentially put the issue to bed. There is no link between paracetamol and autism.”

What an announcement like this does do is places blame on parents of children with autism “with no evidence that that’s the case.” Kelly said:

That feeling of blame and of guilt is really common and incredibly dangerous and not a helpful emotion.

He also says it’s “cruel” to tell pregnant women in real pain or experiencing a fever not to take medication that is safe and effective.

Read more about what Australian experts are worried about here:

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Natasha May

Natasha May

TGA aware of Trump’s claims, but says ‘robust studies have refuted’ them

The TGA said it is aware of announcements by the US administration that use of paracetamol in pregnancy may be associated with an increased risk of autism and ADHD in children, though a causal association has not been established.

Their statement continued:

Whilst there are published articles suggesting an association between maternal paracetamol use and childhood autism, they had methodological limitations. More recent and robust studies have refuted these claims, supporting the weight of other scientific evidence that does not support a causal link between paracetamol and autism or ADHD.

… International peer regulators including the Medicine and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) in the United Kingdom have reiterated that paracetamol should continue to be used in line with product information documents. Following evaluation in 2019 the European Medicines Agency (EMA) found that scientific evidence regarding effects of paracetamol on childhood neurodevelopment was inconclusive.

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