Australia news live: AMA president says ‘no studies’ support Trump claim about paracetamol; PM remembers Zomi Frankcom in UN speech | Australia news
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Australia news live: AMA president says ‘no studies’ support Trump claim about paracetamol; PM remembers Zomi Frankcom in UN speech | Australia news

AMA president says no studies show paracetamol use in pregnancy causes autism

Danielle McMullen, the president of the Australian Medical Association (AMA), said this morning there are no studies showing paracetamol use in pregnancy causes autism.

McMullen spoke to RN Breakfast following US president Donald Trump’s assertion that the popular painkiller was linked to autism – even though it is widely considered a safe option to treat pain and fever during pregnancy.

McMullen said:

There are no studies showing that paracetamol use in pregnancy causes autism. There have been some studies showing what we call an association between paracetamol use and autism in children, but there’s also been really large studies showing that there’s no association. And it’s important to remember that association doesn’t mean cause.

It could be that there’s a whole range of things that happened during pregnancies, and one of those was that the pregnant mother took paracetamol, but it also could be that she had a fever or there were genetic factors.

In fact, in autism, it’s most likely that autism is linked with genetic factors as its primary driver, but we really don’t know the full cause of autism.

AMA president Dr Danielle McMullen
AMA president Dr Danielle McMullen. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
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Penny Wong maintains Australia only sanctions politicians ‘with others’

Foreign minister Penny Wong was questioned on RN Breakfast about Australia’s lack of sanctions on Israeli politicians over the ongoing war in Gaza. Wong said the country had imposed sanctions on two Israeli ministers alongside other nations in June for inciting violence against Palestinians, but RN host Sally Sara asked why those sanctions hadn’t been extended to others as the humanitarian crisis in Gaza has worsened.

Wong said:

You may think that that is insufficient. We do this with other parties, and we have worked very closely with the United Kingdom and Canada and others to impose these sanctions.

Penny Wong. Photograph: Lukas Coch/EPA

Sara again noted Australia had not sanctioned any Israeli politicians in connection with Gaza.

“And to be clear, neither has any other country”, Wong said. “My point about that is: we sanction with others. That is how we have an effect”. She went on:

I understand that people are distressed by what is happening in Gaza. I am distressed by it. We all are. But you do what you can, and that is what we are doing: being here now with others, working with other countries, all of whom want to see peace.

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