1 in 31 children have autism today. Before the rise of Tylenol, that number was 1 in 2,500.
The evidence is available, but most people don’t know about it.
Here’s how you can take action with your new knowledge. The more people that see this, the more you help the fight against autism.
START HERE
The Most Tylenol is given in moments of stress. Maybe a crying baby at 2am, maybe a fever at the start of a road trip, a or hospital birth before you've had time to think.
Those are not the moments to be making these decisions for the first time.
Make your plan now, before you need it. Decide in advance what you'll do when your baby has a fever. What you'll say to the hospital. What you'll tell the babysitter.
HIGHEST IMPACT
Pick one person in your life who is pregnant, trying to get pregnant, or raising a young child. Send them this website. Share the pamphlet. Have a conversation.
You don't need to convince anyone. Simply put the information in front of them, and let them decide.
One conversation could change their child's life.
SYSTEMIC CHANGE
The medical guidance around acetaminophen in babies hasn't changed in decades. That won't change unless people ask for it.
Your elected representatives respond to constituent contact, especially when it's specific, informed, and consistent. You don't need to be an expert. You’re just someone who read the evidence and wants a formal review.
All you have to do is make the call or send the email.