Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Maternal Acetaminophen Use Does Not Increase Autism Risk, Review Confirms
A scientific review of 43 studies on acetaminophen use during pregnancy concluded that there was no evidence that the painkiller increased the risk of autism or other neurodevelopmental disorders. āWe found no clinically important increase in the risk of autism, A.D.H.D. or intellectual disability,ā Dr. Asma Khalil, a professor of obstetrics and maternal fetal medicine at St. Georgeās Hospital, University of London, and the lead author of the report, said at a news briefing. The study was published on Friday in the British medical journal The Lancet. (Ghorayshi, 1/16)
When President Donald Trump claimed last year that taking Tylenol during pregnancy can be linked with an increased risk of autism, ob-gyn Dr. Nathaniel DeNicolaās office had an influx of questions and confusion ā but only for a few days. (Howard, 1/16)
Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health News: Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health Newsā āLetters To The Editorā: Readers Balk At 'Gold Standard' Of Autism Treatment
Autism Care: Pros and Cons. I am writing to provide additional context and research for your article on state cuts to the autism therapy known as applied behavior analysis, or ABA (āItās the āGold Standardā in Autism Care. Why Are States Reining It In?ā Dec. 23). While the piece focused on caps or cuts in service hours being a harmful thing, there have been recent studies showing that increased hours of therapy do not lead to better outcomes for autistic children. (1/20)
In other MAHA news ā
Last year, when Utah lawmakers passed the nationās first statewide ban on community water fluoridation, they included a provision making it easier for people to get fluoride supplements without having to visit a dental provider. This would make fluoride available through individual choice, rather than āmass public dosing,ā as a Utah House of Representatives webpage put it ā part of the rising rhetoric of skepticism thatās led to rollbacks of water fluoridation, a proven method to reduce tooth decay. (Clark, 1/16)
The Trump administration has put its full backing behind whole milk, with new dietary guidelines explicitly recommending full-fat dairy products and President Trump signing a bill to allow schools to serve whole milk again. And while the focus may seem abrupt, it reflects a growing discourse over our understanding of fat consumption.Ā The updatedĀ 2025-30Ā DietaryĀ Guidelines for Americans (DGA)Ā mentionsĀ full-fat dairy or whole milk five times as recommended foods, recommending three servings a day and lumping it in with healthy fats such as olive oil and omega-3-rich seafoods.Ā (Choi, 1/18)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.ās demonization of food and pharma has put the Trump administration on the wrong side of its traditional allies in industry ā but opened a path to a new alliance with a longtime GOP nemesis: lawyers representing consumers who say they were harmed by companies. Kennedyās moves, from his disparagement of Tylenol and ultraprocessed food to his broadsides against vaccines, have lawyers who assemble aggrieved plaintiffs to sue deep-pocketed companies envisioning the sort of cases that turn attorneys into Hollywood heroes and billionaires. (Chu, 1/19)
Ńī¹óåś“«Ć½Ņīl Health News: GOP Promotes MAHA Agenda In Bid To Avert Midterm Losses. Dems Point To Contradictions
When a āMake America Healthy Againā summit was held at the posh Waldorf Astoria in Washington, the line of attendees stretched down the block. The daylong, invitation-only event in November featured a whoās who of MAHA luminaries. Vice President JD Vance attended, as did Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the leader of the ad hoc movement whose members rail against vaccines, Big Pharma, and ultraprocessed food. During a fireside chat that organizers broadcasted online, Vance extolled MAHAās impact on the Trump administration, calling it āa critical part of our success in Washington.ā (Armour, 1/20)
More on the Trump administration ā
The earnest government disease fighter had become a kind of city archetype, alongside aspiring rappers and C-suite strivers. Now scientists are leaving. (Fausset, 1/19)
The Justice Department is considering loosening a slate of gun regulations as it seeks to bolster support from ardent Second Amendment advocates, according to three people familiar with the changes who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss plans that have not been made public. Some of the changes are expected to ease restrictions on the private sale of guns and loosening regulations around shipping firearms. (Stein, 1/19)