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posted by cmn32480 on Thursday August 18 2016, @12:04AM   Printer-friendly
from the that-explains-a-lot dept.

A new study claims that women who use acetaminophen during pregnancy are more likely to have a hyperactive child.

Acetaminophen is also known as paracetamol and by the brand name Tylenol. It is used as a pain reliever and fever reducer and is often bundled into other medications. It has been in the news the last few years because of the risk of overdose and liver damage, and a lot of combination children's medicines that include it have been removed from the market because of the risk that parents may not understand and may overdose the child with the combination medicine and a separate dose of acetaminophen.

the researchers discovered that a mother using acetaminophen at 18 weeks of pregnancy was associated with a greater chance of her child becoming hyperactive or developing conduct problems. At 32 weeks into pregnancy, a mother's use of acetaminophen was linked to higher odds of her child having emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity symptoms.

"It is important to note there are no studies demonstrating a causal link between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and adverse effects on child development," said Marc Boston, a spokesman for McNeil Consumer Healthcare, the maker of Tylenol.

Acetaminophen has long been considered safe for use during pregnancy.


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  • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Thursday August 18 2016, @02:04PM

    by Immerman (3985) on Thursday August 18 2016, @02:04PM (#389592)

    >How does one ethically test that hypothesis?

    Easy - ask mothers who have used acetaminophen during past pregnancies to refrain from using it and closely related drugs during future pregnancies. Heck ask them to alternate with each kid. Whether they use other painkillers with similarly low known risk, or refrain entirely, you still get considerable information about the relative risks of the alternatives.

    The trick to conducting even potentially appalling research ethically, is to seek out subject whose uninfluenced behavior would be to do the potentially risky thing you want to test, and then convince some of them to refrain for the sake of your research. Not always a viable option, but when available the net effect is to reduce the level of potentially risky behavior among your test subjects.

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