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After blame on Tylenol, team Trump's early circumcision theory on autism

Experts swiftly derided the claim saying the theory was strewn with errors and it was yet another example of Kennedy's penchant for "pseudoscience."

Updated on: Oct 10, 2025 02:06 pm IST
AFP |
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US President Donald Trump and his Health Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., on Thursday promoted another fringe theory about autism -- this time linking it to circumcision or to pain medication given for the procedure.

File photo of US Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and U.S. President Donald Trump. (REUTERS)

The claim was swiftly derided by experts who said the main study cited by proponents of this theory was strewn with errors and it was yet another example of Kennedy's penchant for "pseudoscience."

"Don't take Tylenol if you're pregnant and when the baby is born, don't give it Tylenol," Trump said during a Cabinet meeting.

"There's two studies that show children who are circumcised early have double the rate of autism," chimed in Kennedy, adding: "It's highly likely because they're given Tylenol."

"None of this makes sense," Helen Tager-Flusberg, a professor at Boston University and autism expert, told AFP.

"None of the studies have shown that giving Tylenol to babies is linked to a higher risk for autism once you can control for all the confounding variables," she said.

Specifically, he said, the study relied on a tiny sample of Muslim boys circumcised in hospitals rather than at home -- the dominant cultural practice.

Because those children were hospitalized, Mandell said, it was likely they were "otherwise medically compromised," which could explain higher rates of neurodevelopmental disorders.

"A more recent review of studies in this area finds no association between circumcision and any adverse psychological effects," he added.

Kennedy -- a former environmental activist and lawyer who spent decades spreading vaccine misinformation before being appointed Trump's health secretary -- has made uncovering the root causes of autism a central focus, while cutting research grants in other areas.

He has hired vaccine conspiracy theorist David Geier, previously disciplined for practicing medicine without a license and for testing unproven drugs on autistic children, to investigate alleged links between vaccines and autism -- a connection debunked by dozens of prior studies.

 
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Stay updated with US News covering politics, crime, weather, local events, and sports highlights. Get the latest on Donald Trump and American politics along with Horoscope 2026.
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