President Trump doubles down on warning women against taking Tylenol
Despite some controversy in the media for a recent announcement suggesting a link between Tylenol usage in pregnant women and rising autism rates, President Trump is standing firm
by Summer Lane | September 26, 2025
Following a Monday announcement from the White House about Tylenol usage and rising autism rates, President Trump has doubled down on his stance that the painkiller drug is allegedly unsafe for consumption in pregnant women and even small children.
In an all-caps and very straightforward statement posted on Truth Social, the president wrote:
“Pregnant Women, DON’T USE TYLENOL UNLESS ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY, DON’T GIVE TYLENOL TO YOUR YOUNG CHILD FOR VIRTUALLY ANY REASON, BREAK UP THE MMR SHOT INTO THREE TOTALLY SEPARATE SHOTS (NOT MIXED!), TAKE CHICKEN P SHOT SEPARATELY, TAKE HEPATITAS B SHOT AT 12 YEARS OLD, OR OLDER, AND, IMPORTANTLY, TAKE VACCINE IN 5 SEPARATE MEDICAL VISITS! President DJT[.]”
As reported by LindellTV, a new federal report found that prenatal use of Tylenol may be one factor linked to higher autism rates in America.
This new information has surprised many women who were told that taking the drug was safe during pregnancy – and it has spurred robust debate on the topic.
Dr. Pete McCullough, known for his political commentary and his research, remarked on X upon the initial announcement that it was “vaccines, not acetaminophen” that is the primary driver of developmental regression.
He argued, “Tylenol used for fever control for sixty years. Confounding by indication likely behind the association. A leading cause of Tylenol use during pregnancy is maternal vaccination that started about 25 years ago. Systemic inflammation and the reason why Tylenol is indicated (eg post combination vaccination) is the real driver of encephalitis, and the post-encephalitic state of autism.”
Some argue that Tylenol depletes glutathione in the body, which is the body’s natural form of defense against toxic loads. Doctors regularly prescribe Tylenol for children to take after immunizations as a means of fever control.
President Trump’s statement to not give Tylenol to young children, “FOR VIRTUALLY ANY REASON,” is alarming for many parents who, for decades, have regularly relied on this drug to mitigate their children’s fevers.
However, the president’s call to parse immunizations into separate shots, rather than bundles, is nothing new. President Trump has been calling for such an approach since 2012, before he even ran for public office.
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