Pregnant Women Deserve Pain and Fever Relief Without Judgment

Fever itself can endanger fetal development, which is why Tylenol remains an important tool for protecting moms and babies.

(Justin Sullivan / Getty Images)

Primum non nocere. First do no harm. This instruction, admonition and promise rings in the ears of every graduating medical student. The promise to not only help, but also not harm, our patients keeps physicians awake at night. 

Nowhere else is this more poignant than in the OB-GYN‘s office. Despite only one name on the schedule at every pregnancy appointment, two patients are seen. The delicate balance between mother and baby occupies every decision, even when their needs are in direct opposition. Medical care of a pregnant mother is already severely limited by the needs of the future child, restricting available testing, medications and procedures. The question of risk versus benefit influences every decision in care, most often favoring the baby. Unfortunately, this frequently neglects the patient whose name is on the schedule.

This influence applies even to the most seemingly innocuous medications available, including Tylenol.