People with autism say President Trump and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy's insistence that vaccines or Tylenol cause autism despite contrary evidence further marginalizes them.
Why it matters: People with autism and their advocates told Axios that treating autism as a disease with a single cause that can be cured rather than a condition to be accommodated contributes to social stigma and undermines efforts to incorporate them into society.
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Why it matters: People with autism and their advocates told Axios that treating autism as a disease with a single cause that can be cured rather than a condition to be accommodated contributes to social stigma and undermines efforts to incorporate them into society.
- "That's death by a million cuts on a daily basis from society, and then to have it come from our government with a sledgehammer is very disheartening," Russell Lehmann, an international disability rights advocate at UCLA who has autism, told Axios.
- However, Trump told pregnant women to avoid taking the medication and instead "tough it out" if they have a fever.
- "They're not concerned about supporting people with autism, about listening to their concerns."
- The Department of Health and Human Services referred Axios to the White House for comment. The White House didn't immediately respond to Axios' request for comment.
- "Moms who are pregnant don't want to have unhealthy outcomes," Laura Kennedy, the mother of 43-year-old Julia Kennedy, who has autism, told Axios. "This is fear mongering."
- "I wonder why the president gets involved with an issue like this in such a blatant way," she added. "We've been working with credible institutions that we trust and admire and welcome guidance — he's diminishing those institutions."
- "This is dangerous, it's anti-science and it's irresponsible," Mel Merritt, head of policy and campaigns at the UK's National Autistic Society. said in a Monday statement.
- "Such dangerous pseudo-science is putting pregnant women and children at risk and devaluing autistic people," he added.
- "The fact that they're using the word cure, which conjures up that it's a disease, maybe even contagious, that does a huge disservice and adds to the rampant ignorance out there," Lehmann said.
- "It's misplaced and it's frightening," Laura Kennedy said.
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