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The use of Tylenol by women during pregnancy was not associated with autism in their children, according to results of a nationwide ​study in Denmark published on Monday (April 13). - REUTERS

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00:00A sweeping study conducted in Denmark found no link between the use of Tylenol by pregnant women and autism in
00:07their children.
00:08The nationwide Danish study included more than 1.5 million children born between 1997 and 2022, including over 31,000
00:18exposed to Tylenol in the womb.
00:20The researchers reported that autism was later diagnosed in 1.8% of exposed children and 3% of the
00:27unexposed group.
00:28The lack of an association persisted after researchers accounted for individual risk factors.
00:34In September, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it was initiating the process for a label change for
00:40Tylenol to warn that its use by pregnant women may be associated with an increased risk of autism and ADHD.
00:48At the time of that FDA announcement, President Donald Trump said pregnant women and infants should not take the drug.
00:55But U.S. and international medical groups have criticized Trump's remarks, saying they were not evidence-based.
01:02The VERGA van стран and the U.S. men, the U.S. men, the U.S. men and the U
01:02.S. men's
01:02The U.S. men are now feeling now as we speak to the U.S. men in our state's center
01:02to help us back up to the U.S. men.
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