Autism: Is Tylenol to Blame? Is Leucovorin the Answer? A conversation with a fellow pediatrician and developmental behavioral pediatrician
Description
This week, I sit down with two incredible guests to unpack one of the most talked-about (and misunderstood) press conferences in recent months. I’m joined by Dr. Tanya Altmann, pediatrician and founder of Calabasas Pediatrics Wellness Center, and Dr. Anshu Batra, developmental-behavioral pediatrician and autism specialist, to separate fact from fear when it comes to Tylenol, leucovorin, and autism.
We talk about what the latest research actually shows, what parents should know, and why conversations about autism deserve more nuance and empathy than political headlines.
We discuss:
What current research tells us about autism’s causes, including the strong role of genetics and the complex mix of environmental and developmental factors.
Why studies on Tylenol and autism don’t prove causation, and how correlation has been misunderstood in headlines and online discussions.
How leucovorin (folinic acid) may support some children with autism, why it’s not a cure, and what doctors are actually seeing in practice.
The connection between micronutrients, gut health, and neurodevelopment, plus real barriers families face in getting lab work and supplements covered.
What early screen exposure can do to developing brains, and why less screen time and more real-world interaction matter for young children.
Where research and funding need to go next, from identifying subtypes of autism to improving access to early intervention and therapeutic schools.
To connect with Dr. Tanya Altmann check out all her resources at Drtanya.com. Follow her on Instagram at @drtanyaaltmann.
00:00 Introduction
02:05 Meet the Guests
04:09 The Tylenol Controversy
06:41 What We Know About Autism Causes
09:02 Advances in Autism Research
14:15 The Role of Genetics and Environment
18:15 What Is Leucovorin
22:25 What Parents Are Seeing
27:10 Who Might Benefit
29:20 Micronutrients, Gut Health, and Screen Time
38:28 What Research Still Needs to Happen
45:54 Reactions to the White House Press Conference
52:41 Final Takeaways for Parents and Clinicians
55:29 Outro and Reflection
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