Trump's Tylenol misinformation revives history of 'mom blaming' in autism, docs say

Julie Green is pictured at her home in Kingston, Ont., on Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

TORONTO - When U.S. President Donald Trump urged pregnant women to avoid Tylenol because of an unproven belief it can cause autism, Julie Green was brought back to the mom-blaming claims she heard more than a decade ago when her son was diagnosed with the condition.

"It seemed like every couple months there was some new headline. And there was still a lot of like, 'Oh, did mom do this? Did mom do that?' A lot of things were tied to pregnancy. And every now and then you'd brace yourself and you'd think, 'Oh, what did I do?'" said Green, who learned her son had autism when he was three.

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