In this special episode of The Drive, Peter Attia and co-host Nick Stenson address the recent headlines linking acetaminophen use during pregnancy to autism. Attia lays the groundwork by emphasizing the complexity of autism, the apolitical nature of science, and humanity's non-scientific wiring, introducing the Bradford Hill criteria for assessing causality. They dissect a recent review paper and the Swedish cohort study, revealing a weak statistical association that diminishes when accounting for genetic and environmental factors. Attia stresses that genetics, parental age, maternal health, and environmental factors like air pollution are more significant risk factors for autism. He advises pregnant women to generally avoid medications but to consider the health benefits of managing fever and pain with judicious acetaminophen use under medical guidance, advocating for critical thinking and thorough analysis over soundbite-driven decisions.
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