r/science • u/mvea Professor | Medicine • Feb 21 '25
Neuroscience The risk of developing ADHD was 3 times higher among children whose mothers used the pain-relief drug acetaminophen (paracetamol) during pregnancy. The association was stronger among daughters, with the daughters of acetaminophen-exposed mothers showing a 6.16 times higher likelihood of ADHD.
https://newsroom.uw.edu/news-releases/child-adhd-risk-linked-to-mothers-use-of-acetaminophen
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u/ivorybiscuit Feb 22 '25 edited Feb 22 '25
That blew my mind when I was getting ready to give birth and I heard that in a class. And then again when I caved after hours of excruciating back labor with minimal progress and asked for the epidural.
Edit: my preference was to try unmedicated first then switch to pain relief if the situation called for it. My word choice of caved was perhaps poor for what I intended- I caved in the sense that I couldn't physically handle labor at that point so I chose, with no judgement on myself from myself or any part of my care team, to get an epidural. I just moved to one of the options I had already thought out. Apologies if my language was inferring any judgement on people getting epidurals.
I firmly believe everyone should have the choice to follow their own birth preferences and keep them and their child safe, be that medicated, unmedicated, etc. Epidurals are an incredible medical feat and people should be able to freely choose if they want them or not based on what is important to them.