Los Angeles Times

TRUMP’S ILLNESS APPEARS MORE SERIOUS

President, sick with virus, stages drive- by event as doctors say he’s on a steroid after oxygen levels dipped.

- By Laura King and Chris Megerian

WASHINGTON — President Trump, hospitaliz­ed with COVID- 19, received supplement­al oxygen on Saturday — a previously undisclose­d episode — and is being treated with a powerful steroid amid indication­s that his lungs may have suffered some damage, the White House physician said Sunday.

As questions continued about the severity of his illness and its progressio­n, Trump late Sunday afternoon staged a motorcade drive- by outside Walter Reed National Military Medical Center and could be seen through the window of his massive black SUV, masked and waving to supporters who gathered outside.

The brief trip drew sharp criticism from medical experts who said Trump had endangered the Secret Service agents in the vehicle with him.

Earlier, at a briefing in front of the hospital, doctors treating Trump continued to be upbeat about his condition. One of his physicians said the president could be discharged as soon as Monday, but another conceded they had not been fully forthcomin­g in their initial medical briefing Saturday.

Trump’s hospitaliz­ation, the most serious known medical episode involving the country’s chief executive since President Reagan was shot in 1981, has roiled the presidenti­al race a month before the Nov. 3 election. It also represents a setback to the Trump campaign strategy of turning attention away from the pandemic that has killed nearly 210,000 Americans.

Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign announced Sunday evening that he had tested negative for the virus. Biden had a similarly negative test Friday.

At Sunday’s briefing, the White House physician, Dr. Sean Conley, provided several significan­t new pieces of informatio­n about the 74year- old president, saying that he had experience­d a “high fever” Friday morning and had received supplement­al oxygen for about an hour before being transporte­d to the military hospital in suburban Bethesda, Md., later that day.

He disclosed that Trump’s oxygen level had fallen again Saturday to the point that supplement­al oxygen was again required, and that scans of his lungs showed some indication­s of damage, although he insisted they were not of “major clinical concern.”

Significan­tly, Conley said the president had been given dexamethas­one, a steroid. Doctors prescribe that drug for COVID- 19 patients to combat lung damage caused by inf lammation, which is one of the major ways the disease can kill patients. Experts had said previously that a decision to put Trump on the drug would be a major developmen­t.

Conley had not answered a question Saturday about whether Trump had been given any steroid and had also evaded repeated questions about supplement­al oxygen. On Sunday, he acknowledg­ed that he had omitted some informatio­n at the earlier briefing, saying he was “trying to ref lect the upbeat attitude” of Trump and his aides.

“It came off that we were trying to hide something,” he said, adding that had not been their intent. He continued to withhold some informatio­n, however, declining to say how low Trump’s oxygen level had dropped, for example. On Friday it fell “below 94%” but hadn’t hit “the low 80s,” he said.

The disclosure that Trump is receiving dexamethas­one is a clear signal that his illness is a serious one, said Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health. In an interview Saturday, Jha said he would watch for use of dexamethas­one, which would be a “very clear signal that he has a more severe disease.”

In mild cases, he said, “we actually think it does more harm than good.”

On Sunday, Jha repeated that assessment, noting that it was unclear whether Trump could suffer longterm damage to his lungs. Some patients have breathing trouble even after their initial recovery, he noted.

Although doctors have released only incomplete informatio­n, Jha said it appears Trump has a moderate case of COVID- 19.

“I don’t think he’s out of the woods yet. He could get worse,” Jha said. “And I think he needs very close monitoring.”

Like other steroids, dexamethas­one can have significan­t side effects that could have an effect on Trump’s ability to work. Those can include irritabili­ty, mood swings and trouble sleeping, according to medical experts. By reducing fever and discomfort, it can also make patients feel tem

porarily better even if their illness and risk haven’t changed, Dr. Robert M. Wachter, head of the Department of Medicine at UC San Francisco, said on Twitter.

The National Institutes of Health recommends use of the drug for COVID- 19 patients who need supplement­al oxygen, but cautions against it in mild cases.

Despite the disclosure of more serious symptoms, the medical team said Trump was doing well Sunday.

“Since we last spoke, the president has continued to improve,” Conley said, adding that the course of any illness has “ups and downs.”

Another of the medical team, Dr. Brian Garibaldi of Johns Hopkins University, said Trump was “up and around” and feeling well.

“Our hope is that we could plan for a discharge as early as tomorrow,” he said.

At the same time, however, the doctors said Trump was only midway through a f ive- day course of remdesivir, an antiviral drug that medical experts have said would be more difficult to provide outside a hospital setting.

Jha said Sunday he was puzzled by the comment that Trump could be discharged quickly.

“This whole thing strikes me as very unusual. You would not have a normal person getting discharged at this moment,” he said. “Obviously they can do a lot for him out of the White House. But I f ind this strange, and not consistent with how this

is typically managed.”

Trump, clearly eager to signal that his condition is improving, released a video on Twitter shortly before his brief trip outside the hospital in which he implied that his bout of illness was already behind him.

“I learned a lot about COVID — I learned it by really going to school,” Trump, clad in an open- collared white shirt and a suit jacket, said in the video. “This is the real school, this isn’t the ‘ Let’s read a book’ school. And I get it.”

But his foray drew a furious online outpouring of criticism. James Phillips, a professor of emergency medicine at George Washington University Medical School and an attending physician at Walter Reed, who is not treating the president, called it “insanity.”

Phillips noted on Twitter that Trump’s armored limousine is designed to be sealed from outside air, concentrat­ing any viral particles that might have passed through Trump’s mask. Everyone in the vehicle should now face a 14- day quarantine, he wrote.

“They might get sick. They may die. For political theater.”

Earlier Sunday, Trump’s national security advisor, Robert O’Brien, appearing on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” portrayed Trump as “f irmly in control” of the government. He refused to discuss details of contingenc­y plans if the president were incapacita­ted, but said “we’re

prepared” for any scenario.

O’Brien, who recovered from a bout of COVID- 19 over the summer — said he would expect the president to remain hospitaliz­ed “for at least another period of time,” adding that “day seven and eight are the critical days.”

The contradict­ory accounts by doctors and White House officials indicate how Trump, who often tries to mold facts to fit his preferred narrative, has extended that approach to his own medical care.

Asked why he wasn’t upfront Saturday about Trump receiving oxygen, Conley admitted that the omission was part of a public relations front.

“I was trying to reflect the upbeat attitude that the team, the president, that his course of illness had had,” Conley said. “I didn’t want to give any informatio­n that might steer the course of illness in another direction.”

The White House acknowledg­ed that the awareness that Trump may be listening can affect how medical informatio­n is presented.

Spokeswoma­n Alyssa Farah, asked by reporters about Conley’s concession that he had not been fully candid, said that “when you’re treating a patient, you want to project confidence, you want to lift their spirits. And that was the intent.”

Farah also said the White House would disclose the number of positive tests that personnel there have had. A few hours later, White House

Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany contradict­ed that, saying the numbers would not be released because of privacy concerns.

In addition to inf luencing what his doctors say, Trump has also attempted to inject some of his own medical advice into his care. On Saturday, Conley said the president had asked about whether he should take hydroxychl­oroquine, an antimalari­al drug that has been touted among his allies and in conservati­ve media despite no proof that it’s effective against the coronaviru­s.

“We discussed it. He asked about it,” Conley said. “He’s not on it now.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ( D- San Francisco), appearing on CBS, emphasized that “our prayers are with the president and the f irst lady,” who has also tested positive for the coronaviru­s, but suggested that senior Democrats were being left in the dark about the president’s condition.

“We’re getting our informatio­n the way everyone else is, in the media,” she said.

Without directly addressing the contradict­ory statements about Trump’s condition, Pelosi alluded to the president’s tendency to berate or undercut aides when their words, even if factual, displease him.

The public, she said, should not be left with the impression that when Trump’s doctors give a briefing, “it has to be approved by

the president. That’s not very scientific.”

The White House has also undertaken a less- thanrobust effort to trace other people who might have been in contact with Trump and exposed to the virus. A number of people who were around the president over the previous week have said publicly that no one from the White House had reached out and urged they be tested.

The Trump campaign, however, sought to portray the president as having consistent­ly been serious about public health protocols to fight the coronaviru­s — even though he has repeatedly denigrated mask- wearing, as recently as his Tuesday debate with Democratic rival Biden.

Campaign senior advisor Jason Miller, appearing on multiple news talk shows, was peppered with questions about lax enforcemen­t of government disease prevention guidelines at the White House and at campaign events attended by Trump.

On ABC’s “This Week,” Miller accused Biden of using masks as a “prop.”

On NBC’s “Meet the Press,” he was asked why Trump did not self- isolate Wednesday after his close aide Hope Hicks tested positive for the virus, as Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines call for in cases of known exposure.

“They take a lot of precaution­ary measures,” Miller said of Trump’s team.

 ?? Alex Edelman AFP/ Getty I mages ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP waves Sunday as his motorcade drives past supporters outside Walter Reed medical center in Bethesda, Md. His treatment for COVID- 19 includes taking a steroid, signaling lung damage.
Alex Edelman AFP/ Getty I mages PRESIDENT TRUMP waves Sunday as his motorcade drives past supporters outside Walter Reed medical center in Bethesda, Md. His treatment for COVID- 19 includes taking a steroid, signaling lung damage.
 ?? Alex Edelman AFP/ Getty I mages ?? AN SUV carrying President Trump outside Walter Reed. Medical experts say he endangered Secret Service agents traveling with him.
Alex Edelman AFP/ Getty I mages AN SUV carrying President Trump outside Walter Reed. Medical experts say he endangered Secret Service agents traveling with him.

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