RFK Jr. Says Link Between Circumcision and Autism 'Highly Likely'
Health Secretary Kennedy and President Trump claim boys given Tylenol after circumcision have double autism risk, despite medical groups disputing the unproven link.
- Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. stated that two studies indicate children circumcised early have double the rate of autism because they are given Tylenol after the procedure.
- Congressman Jerry Nadler called Kennedy's remarks an antisemitic remark, emphasizing their offense to the Jewish community.
- Kennedy defended his claims against media criticism, asserting that he is following the science on acetaminophen's link to autism and negating the misinterpretation of his words as antisemitic.
- The Orthodox Jewish Chamber of Commerce supported Kennedy, claiming that the accusations against him were false and highlighting that he never intended to attack the Jewish tradition of circumcision.
131 Articles
131 Articles
Donald Trump and his Health Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now spread a theory linking autism to the use of Tylenol in circumcised children
RFK Jr. linked circumcision and Tylenol to autism. Here’s what scientists say
At a Cabinet meeting earlier this week, President Donald Trump repeated a now familiar warning: Pregnant people should avoid Tylenol and refrain from giving it to infants. But it was Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s response that ignited a wave of…
Tylenol Claims Are a Microcosm of Trump and RFK’s Wider Attack on Public Health
Trump and RFK’s “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) commission has come for us, and public health in the U.S. is already suffering. A closer look at the recent debacle in which the Trump administration baselessly claimed that autism is caused by taking acetaminophen during pregnancy offers a microcosm through which to understand the Trump administration’s larger public health agenda
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