Skip to content
Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust homepage
  • Home
  • Patients and visitors
  • Our hospitals
  • Our services
  • Our people
  • Our trust
  • News
  • Charity
  • Home
  • Patients and visitors
  • Our hospitals
  • Our services
  • Our people
  • Our trust
  • News
  • Charity

Paracetamol in pregnancy: no evidence of a link to autism

Home → General → Health → Paracetamol in pregnancy: no evidence of a link to autism
    • 25TH SEPTEMBER 2025
    • 0 COMMENTS
    Paracetamol in pregnancy: no evidence of a link to autism

    People should feel reassured that using paracetamol, in line with NHS advice, is safe.

    Recent claims from US President Donald Trump have suggested that taking paracetamol in pregnancy may cause autism. These comments have caused understandable concern, but health experts and autism charities are clear: there is no credible evidence to support this claim.

    Visit NHS website to read the full advice on paracetamol use during pregnancy

    What the evidence says:

    • The UK medicines regulator, the MHRA, has confirmed paracetamol remains the recommended pain relief in pregnancy when used as directed. There is no evidence that it causes autism.
    • Autism charities, including Autistica and the National Autistic Society, have jointly stated that studies suggesting a link are weak, poorly designed, and do not provide reliable evidence. High-quality, well-controlled studies indicate there is no link between paracetamol in pregnancy and autism.
    • Untreated pain or fever in pregnancy can be harmful, so safe symptom relief is essential.

    Continue to follow NHS guidance

    People should feel reassured that using paracetamol, in line with NHS advice, is safe.

    Wes Streeting, Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, said,

    I’ve just got to be really clear about this: there is no evidence to link the use of paracetamol by pregnant women to autism in their children. None.

    He cited a major Swedish study last year, external involving 2.4 million children, which found no link between the drug and autism. Visit the Jamanetwork website to read the full study

    Public health agencies and autism charities agree there is no evidence that paracetamol causes autism, and existing guidance remains unchanged.

     

    • Visit gov.uk to read the full the MHRS article
    • Visit Autistica to see the statement from leading UK autism charities
    • Visit BBC News to read the Tylenol: Trust doctors over Trump on paracetamol, Wes Streeting story
    • General,
    • Health,
    • Maternity,
    • News,
    • Obstetrics,
    • Women and Newborn
  • Visiting us

    Find us on a map

  • Call us

    01274 542 200

  • Provide feedback

    Send an email

Contact us

Switchboard: 01274 542 200

Appointment service: 01274 274 274

Bradford Royal Infirmary
Duckworth Lane
Bradford
BD9 6RJ

Visit us

AccessAble logo

We have partnered with AccessAble to provide detailed information on accessibility within our hospitals.

CQC rating - Good

CQC inspected and rated good

Our services are regulated by the Care Quality Commission (CQC).
Find out more about our ratings.

© 2025 Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Privacy statement   Accessibility statement