

Dr. Trump’s Bad Medicine
37 snips Sep 23, 2025
Brandy Zadrozny, a journalist for MSNBC specializing in misinformation and extremism, dives into the controversial claims made by the Trump administration linking autism rates to Tylenol use during pregnancy. She unpacks the rushed report from Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and highlights the dangers of spreading unfounded health narratives. Brandy emphasizes how this reflects broader trends in public health messaging and the impacts of the 'Make America Healthy Again' movement.
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Premature Claim On Tylenol And Autism
- The administration announced a report linking prenatal acetaminophen to autism without robust evidence.
- That claim risks misinforming pregnant women and shifting blame onto individuals, especially women.
Deadline-Driven Science Theater
- RFK Jr. promised answers by September and the administration rushed a narrative to meet that deadline.
- Political pressure appears to have driven a premature public health proclamation.
Don’t Act On Press-Conference Claims
- Do not change medical decisions based on politicized press events without seeing the underlying study.
- Wait for peer-reviewed data and guidance from independent medical groups before acting.