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Nigel Farage has refused to label President Trump irresponsible for claiming paracetamol could be linked to autism.
Earlier this week, the US President announced that warning labels advising pregnant women to avoid a certain drug, commonly known in the US as Tylenol, would soon appear on its packaging.
His remarks provoked outrage from medical experts worldwide, who dismissed them as fear-mongering with ‘no robust evidence’ to back them up.
In the UK, the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) emphasized that there is ‘no evidence linking the use of paracetamol during pregnancy to autism in children.’
But Reform UK leader Nigel Farage today insisted he had ‘no idea’ if the claim was correct.
Instead, he argued: ‘We were told thalidomide was a very safe drug and it wasn’t.’
The notorious drug killed and injured up to 100,000 babies in the 1950s and left thousands severely disabled, damaging their limbs, ears and eyes.
It was eventually withdrawn by health officials in the UK in 1961.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage today insisted he had ‘no idea’ if President Trump’s claim linking paracetamol and autism was correct

The infamous drug thalidomide resulted in the death and injury of up to 100,000 babies in the 1950s, leaving many with severe disabilities affecting their limbs, ears, and eyes.
When questioned on LBC radio by host Nick Ferrari about whether President Trump’s statements were ‘irresponsible,’ Mr. Farage responded: ‘I have no idea, I have no idea.’
‘We were told thalidomide was a very safe drug and it wasn’t. Who knows.
‘I don’t know and you don’t know.
‘He has a particular thing about autism, I think because there has been some in his family and he feels it very personally. I have no idea.’
Paracetamol is commonly used by pregnant women to alleviate pain, headaches, and fever. It remains the NHS’s recommended ‘first choice’ painkiller during pregnancy, but it should be taken only for short periods and at the lowest effective dose.
In a surprising comment on Monday, President Trump told reporters that taking paracetamol was simply ‘not good,’ urging all pregnant women to discuss the use of this medication with their doctors.
He later doubled down: ‘Fight like hell not to take it.’
A handful of well-publicised studies have suggested a possible link between maternal use of paracetamol and higher rates of autism or ADHD.
But the findings are inconsistent, and experts stress that any association remains based on very limited and conflicting evidence.
The most recent, published last month by researchers at Mount Sinai in New York and Harvard’s School of Public Health, urged women to take paracetamol in pregnancy only on the advice of a doctor—though the authors acknowledged the evidence was not conclusive.
They urged mothers-to-be to use paracetamol sparingly, taking only the lowest effective dose for the shortest possible time.
But they stressed their results did not prove the drug directly causes autism or other neurodevelopmental disorders.
Instead, they said the association was consistent enough to warrant further investigation.
Scientists on both sides of the Atlantic reacted with scepticism—a some criticised the claims as stigmatising parents of children with autism.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting also dismissed the remarks.
‘Don’t pay any attention whatsoever to what Donald Trump says about medicine,’ he said.

President Trump declared that government health warnings will be printed on Paracetamol packets—often sold under the brand name Tylenol in the US— telling pregnant women to avoid the painkiller over fears it could raise the risk of autism in their unborn children
‘In fact, don’t even take my word for it as a politician—listen to British doctors, British scientists, the NHS. It’s really important, at a time when there is scepticism, to follow medical science.’
Thalidomide was hailed as a ‘wonder drug’ for morning sickness when it was created by German pharmaceutical giant Gruenenthal Group in the 1950s.
But it was soon pulled after a doctor in Australia reported a link between the drug and birth defects, such as malformed hands, facial disfigurement and brain damage.
Charities blame the drug for the deaths of up to 100,000 babies worldwide, and say it left 10,000 severely disabled — such as with missing or deformed limbs.
Experiments later revealed that it triggered birth defects by stopping blood vessels forming in babies.
Yet, despite being pulled for morning sickness in 1961, thalidomide is still used to this day.
There are, however, strict rules on women of child-bearing age using the drug.
It is given to patients with myeloma, a type of cancer that starts in the bone marrow, and for the treatment of Hansen’s disease—also known as leprosy—which is an infection caused by slow-growing bacteria.