Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Viewpoints: Autism Experts Respond To Claims Of Tylenol, Vaccine Link; Wellness Industry Is Creating Panic
On Monday, President Trump suggested that vaccines were contributing to the increase in autism and told parents to space out their children鈥檚 vaccine schedule. Mr. Trump and top health officials, including Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., linked Tylenol to autism. Trump said pregnant women should only take it if they couldn鈥檛 鈥渢ough it out.鈥 (Helen Tager-Flusberg, Alison Singer, Brian K. Lee, and Eric Garcia, 9/23)
I wasn鈥檛 looking for a diagnosis in April of 2004 when I began reading a New York Times article on Asperger鈥檚 syndrome 鈥 then psychiatry鈥檚 label for a less-disabling form of autism. But soon after reading it, I had a whole new way of understanding myself. (Maia Szalavitz, 9/22)
A rule of thumb: The more certainty a person expresses regarding the causes of autism, the less knowledgeable they are. President Donald Trump and his advisers expressed excessive certitude on Monday about this complex neurodevelopmental disorder. (9/22)
I鈥檓 a psychiatrist, a mother, and an increasingly anxious wellness enthusiast.聽And I have a confession:聽some of the worst anxiety I鈥檝e experienced came not from my clinical work or child-rearing responsibilities, but from reading too many articles about what might be harming my health. (Ana Ivkovic Smith, 9/23)
Five years ago, the Rev. Shelly McNaughton-Lawrence performed her first funeral for a victim of the COVID-19 pandemic 鈥 her own mother. LuAnn McNaughton was buried in a sealed coffin without being embalmed, because the family made a decision to minimize the risk of COVID exposure for the mortuary workers. (Dion Lefler, 9/23)