Jeremiah Giddens
1.4K posts

Jeremiah Giddens
@CoachGiddy
Behavior Support/GHR Assistant Basketball Coach @ Muhlenberg High School P.A.V.E Eagles Super Fan: Est 1989-90 Sixers Fan: Indifferent Atm Phillies Fan Idk yet
Oakbrook University Katılım Şubat 2016
777 Takip Edilen318 Takipçiler

@ClownWorld Well if he is an actual teacher , then hes fired! My man is Violating all the laws for tik tok. Jackass
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@charlestonwhyt U gotta be a stone cold menace to not like butterflies.
Mountville, PA 🇺🇸 English

@LasVegasFill Personally speaking, I love when scrambled eggs look like this. That is all.
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@barstoolsports @stoolgambling Sitting criss cross applesauce on the couch is diabolical!
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@LaRussellGC Takes ultimate growth by anyone to acknowledge that within, then share it with others. #Powerful
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Most ppl feel this way about me 😂
Jeremiah Giddens@CoachGiddy
@TrudiiBee U frustrate me so much! See u tmrw!
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@TrudiiBee U frustrate me so much! See u tmrw!
Temple, PA 🇺🇸 English


As someone who has studied and taught students with autism for many years. I have a few things to say about this claim that acetaminophen or Tylenol is a major cause of autism.
I think a timeline, can help to explain a few things.
Acetaminophen was first synthesized in 1878 by French chemist Henri Leroux. It was later recognized for its pain-relieving properties in the early 20th century, with significant research conducted in the 1940s. Acetaminophen became widely available in the United States as a prescription medication in 1955 and was marketed under the name Tylenol in the 1960s. Acetaminophen (Tylenol) was not widely used in the USA until the 1960's.
The term "autism" was first introduced by Paul Eugen Bleuler in 1911 to describe a form of schizophrenia.
The earliest known description of autism dates back to the 18th century (The 1700's), when Jean-Marc Gaspard Itard described a boy named Victor who exhibited classic symptoms of autism.
The formal recognition of autism as a distinct condition is credited to Dr. Leo Kanner and Dr. Hans Asperger, both of whom conducted pioneering research in the early 20th century, with Kanner publishing his findings in 1943.
Autism has a long history of being researched, and undergoing changes in it's definition and symptoms. Autism Spectrum was not coined until the 1980's, and currently the Autism Spectrum includes symptoms that ranged from completely non-verbal to mentally brilliant but with social deficits. This widely ranging definition, with widely ranging symptoms accounts for the greater number of individuals being diagnosed with Autism. Keeping in mind there is not definitive test to diagnose Autism (Like a blood test), it is somewhat a subjective diagnosis that involves interviews, conversational observations, reports of symptoms, and parental descriptions.
My take-aways from this suggestion that Acetaminophen is the cause, or a cause of Autism is clearly speculative at best. First of all, the greater number of students diagnosed with Autism is NOT because of the greater number of students having the disorder, but rather the enhanced and expanded diagnosis of the disorder. The Autism Spectrum now covers multitudes of students that a couple of decades ago would not have been considered Autistic, although those students existed. How many of you in your 50's or 60's have thought back to classmates and thought, I think "so and so" might have been autistic.
The last thing I would say emphatically is there is NO CAUSE of autism, there are most likely NUMEROUS causes of autism. Autism is a spectrum (meaning widely ranging symptoms and degree of symptoms). It is misleading to claim Tylenol causes Autism, because if it caused Autism, every expecting mother taking Tylenol during pregnancy would have a child with Autism. Could it have an effect, or in combination with other things contribute to a child having Autism, possibly. But without serious research, this claim issued today is at the very least inconclusive.
This is why we need and it is important to have a person over our healthcare system that is QUALIFIEED, trained, educated, and experienced in the medical field.
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@mgstupelo @allenanalysis Thank you for sharing this knowledge. My wife was in mid sentence as I was reading your post saying autism has been around way before Tylenol.
West Reading, PA 🇺🇸 English












