Literature Synthesis no_lock Open Access no_lock Open Peer Review

Evidence that acetaminophen triggers autism in susceptible individuals has been ignored and mishandled for more than a decade.

  • William Parker
  • Paul T. Corrigan
  • Rachel Anderson
  • John P. Jones III
  • Zacharoula Konsoula
  • Lauren Williamson
  • R. Randal Bollinger

Submitted: Oct 15, 2025| Posted: Oct 26, 2025| Published: Oct 26, 2025 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.70542/rcj-japh-art-1gca1pr

100

1.4k

 

 

 

Citations

Views

Downloads

Comments

Views

100

1.4k

 

 

 

Citations

Views

Downloads

Comments

Views

search_icon
search_icon Abstract
search_icon Introduction
search_icon Methods
search_icon Results
search_icon Discussion
search_icon Conclusions
search_icon Disclosures, Funding & Conflicts of Interest
search_icon References
Authors search_icon Tools search_icon
search_icon
search_icon Abstract
search_icon Introduction
search_icon Methods
search_icon Results
search_icon Discussion
search_icon Conclusions
search_icon Disclosures, Funding & Conflicts of Interest
search_icon References
Expert Commentary
Authors
Article
Supplemental Materials

Authors

William Parker , [email protected]
  Corresponding Author
  Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Paul T. Corrigan
  Department of English and Writing, University of Tampa, Tampa, FL, USA
Rachel Anderson
  WPLab
John P. Jones III
  WPLab
Zacharoula Konsoula ,
  WPLab
Lauren Williamson
  Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Kentucky University
R. Randal Bollinger
  Departments of Surgery and Immunology, Duke University Medical Center