Real Consequences: Trump’s Bullshit Claim About Tylenol Is Seeing Real World Results

from the fever-dream dept

There’s this insane subset of people who, when they talk about Donald Trump, I’ll never understand. It’s the ones who claim that taking what Donald Trump says seriously is a mistake that most people are unlikely to make. It’s also expressed by the crowd that claims something to the effect of: you shouldn’t take Trump literally, but you should take him seriously.

That this is said about the most powerful single individual on the planet is bonkers. This is typically how I’ve talked about my own kids when they were toddlers. Inevitably, one of my kids would be trying to say something entirely innocuous, only to have what came out of their mouth be some horrible word or swear or something. And I would hand-wave that away. C’mon, I’d tell people, you know that’s not what he meant to say.

Donald Trump is, unfortunately, the President of the United States of America. When he speaks, people listen. And a percentage of those listening will take him both literally and seriously. And when Donald Trump told American women last year to not take Tylenol, or give it to their young children, because it would give their kids autism, well, they listened.

Researchers found that in the wake of that batshit crazy announcement, use of Tylenol and its generic equivalents dropped significantly in use in emergency rooms and prescriptions written for children.

For nearly three months after that, new research found, Tylenol orders for pregnant women showing up in emergency rooms dropped and prescriptions of the generic drug for children rose. This happened despite sharp criticism of the president’s message from doctor groups saying that the drug, leucovorin, shouldn’t be broadly used for autism and Tylenol is safe during pregnancy.

“It just shows that in our country right now, health care has been politicized in a way that political messages are driving and impacting care — and not always for good,” said Dr. Susan Sirota, a pediatrician in Highland Park, Illinois, who wasn’t involved with the research.

The research suggested something like a 10% drop in measurable use of acetaminophen or paracetamol in the wake of Trump’s announcement. That doesn’t tell the whole story, of course, since so much of the use of Tylenol occurs through over the counter purchases at drug stores and the like. Based on market research, however, Tylenol specifically saw a nearly identical 11% or so drop in OTC sales as well back in November.

But that isn’t all. With all of this attention on a common drug supposedly giving children autism, parental anxiety about the condition has shot up as well. And, as a result, parents are turning toward experimental drugs for that that defy expert recommendations. That’s where leucovorin comes in.

Leucovorin is a derivative of folic acid used for, among other things, reducing the toxic side effects of certain chemotherapy drugs and treating a rare blood disorder. It has also been studied for a neurological condition known as cerebral folate deficiency and for a subset of autistic children, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The pediatrics group doesn’t recommend routine use of the drug for autistic children. Early, small-scale studies have explored its use, “and some findings suggest potential benefit in carefully selected cases,” the group said.

Still, after the federal announcement about the drug, Sirota said some families in her practice asked about getting it for their autistic children. She educated them about the evidence, told them about the potential for side effects and didn’t prescribe it. Potential side effects include irritability, nausea and vomiting and skin issues like dermatitis.

This may sound melodramatic, but there is real psychological harm being done to those just starting families in this country. For most parents, their children become their entire world. Their raison d’etre. And if you scare the shit out of them about Tylenol giving their kids a disorder, they’re going to stop taking the common drug and turn to any hair-brained lifeline they can find to try to keep their children from that disorder.

Does leucovorin do anything at all for anyone with autism? I don’t have the slightest clue. And neither does the Trump administration. I’m quite confident that there is no current reason to see Tylenol as a danger to the general populace, however, and that didn’t stop Trump from going on television and playing doctor.

“It feels like a pattern with our government, right? They keep building on these houses of cards that just fall down,” she said. “This politicizing of medicine just in general, and moving away from science, has been so challenging.”

The consequences of this sort of thing are going to span decades. Let that sink in.

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Comments on “Real Consequences: Trump’s Bullshit Claim About Tylenol Is Seeing Real World Results”

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17 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
TKnarr (profile) says:

The sad thing is that you should take what Trump says seriously in the same way you should take what the Joker says seriously. Because they’re literally an insane clown with only a tenuous hold on reality, but they’re an insane clown with a tanker-truck full of SmileX who absolutely will blanket the city with it. The people who claim you shouldn’t take him seriously or literally? Are the ones who paid him to do that and are now worried someone might connect the dots that lead back to them.

Unfortunately our version of Bruce Wayne really is the brainless billionaire he-bimbo Batman’s secret identity pretends to be.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: 'Sure he's crippled for life from polio but at least he's not autistic!'

The weaponization of the parental protection instinct against both the parents and their own kids is quite possibly the most vile part of the pro-plague movement, resulting in situations where thanks to a barrage of lies and fraudulent ‘science’ so many parents have been convinced that their children are better off maimed for life or dead than autistic and that the actual medical experts who know what they’re talking about are all part of some grand conspiracy and it’s only the ‘alternative experts’/frauds that are telling the truth.

pyrosf (profile) says:

Re: Autistics are the bad guys to them.

People with a sense of honor, strong moral compass, a willingness to hold people accountable. These are “Bad People”(TM) who will hold grifters accountable if they are allowed to.

The best thing to do is turn them into the next target. MAGA is always looking for an other to target and this is as a good group as any.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Gibberish translations

There’s this insane subset of people who, when they talk about Donald Trump, I’ll never understand. It’s the ones who claim that taking what Donald Trump says seriously is a mistake that most people are unlikely to make. It’s also expressed by the crowd that claims something to the effect of: you shouldn’t take Trump literally, but you should take him seriously.

I can’t help but remember a clip I saw a few years back where after Trump gave one of his rambling ‘replies’ to a question the talking heads felt the need to step in and ‘translate’ what he’d just said, to clear it up for the viewers I imagine who might have been confused and thought that what was just said had nothing to do with the question and only barely anything to do with reality…

If you have to make excuses for why what someone says does not match what they actually mean then that’s a pretty good admission that they cannot be trusted to speak coherently or that anyone should trust what they say, which raises the rather important question as to why anyone would or should.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

The problem is sometimes during that rambling he says the quiet parts out loud or states exactly whatever crazy thing he is going to do in the future.

If he wasn’t connected to actual power you could just ignore his ramblings as exactly that, ramblings of an old man that is losing his mental capabilities.

Unfortunately because he is president, if he says jump (no matter how crazy or stupid the situation) other people jump. Therefore you cant ignore entirely what he says and you have to trust that he really is going to attempt to do the terrible things he says.

Anonymous Coward says:

Hmmmmm

Medical & Peer-Reviewed Journals
“Acetaminophen in children: An old drug with new warnings” — Canadian Family Physician / PubMed Central
Covers the potential association between acetaminophen and asthma, as well as the FDA’s warning about rare but serious skin reactions in children. PubMed Central
🔗 https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3796971/

“Paracetamol use in infants and children was never shown to be safe for neurodevelopment” — PMC / PubMed (2022)
A systematic review concluding that while acetaminophen is well-established as safe for liver function at recommended doses, none of the 52 safety experiments reviewed actually monitored neurodevelopment, raising questions about long-term neurological effects.
PubMed🔗 https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9056471/

“The Dangers of Acetaminophen for Neurodevelopment Outweigh Scant Evidence for Long-Term Benefits” — PMC
A more controversial piece arguing, based on animal models and human observational data, that early exposure to acetaminophen may be linked to autism spectrum disorder — a claim that remains contested in the mainstream medical community.
🔗 PubMed Central https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10814214/

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