Marin Independent Journal

Trump’s age, health woes raise his risk for COVID-19 illness

- ByMarilynn­Marchione

PresidentD­onald Trump has several strikes against him — age, obesity, elevated cholestero­l and being male — that could put him at greater risk of becoming seriously ill from the coronaviru­s infection he disclosed early Friday.

Trump’s doctor said later in the day that he felt fatigued and that he had been given an experiment­al treatment aimed at staving off a severe case of C OVID -19. Friday evening he was fl own to amilitary hospital where he will spend a “few days.” Being there would allow for closer monitoring, such as if doctors decide they’d like scans of his lungs, and a quicker reaction time if he takes a turn for the worse.

“The odds are far and away that he’ll have a mild illness” asmost peoplewith the virus do, said Dr. Gregory Poland, an infectious disease specialist at the Mayo Clinic who has no role in Trump’s care.

But COVID-19 is very unpredicta­ble, he stressed.

“We have young people who die. We have nursing home patients, a lot of them, who actually do quite well,” Poland said.

Here’s what experts say about Trump’s outlook and next steps.

Signs and symptoms

Infection causes mild or no symptoms in about 80% of cases. About 15% of people become seriously ill and 5% get critically ill.

Symptoms, when they do occur, usually appear two to 14 days after infection and can include loss of smell or taste, coughing, a sore throat, trouble breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, nausea or vomiting, diarrhea and fever.

Up to half of patients who are hospitaliz­ed don’t have a fever when admitted but nearly all develop one. How people fare varies widely — some seem to be recovering and then suddenly worsen.

Pneumonia, often with a specific appearance on X-rays, sometimes develops but complicati­ons in virtually every organ of the body have been reported.

Doctors also increasing­ly recognize that some people have long-lasting symptoms.

Trump’s risks

Older age, being male and having any other health problems increase the chance of severe illness, and Trump has those.

At 74, “his age would be the primary risk factor,” said Dr. David Banach, an infectious diseases physician at the University of Connecticu­t’s health system.

People ages 65 to 74 are seven times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 than those who are 18 to 29 years old, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The risks rise exponentia­lly at older ages.

Trump also is obese, with a bodymass index just past 30.

“Obesity is a state of chronic lowered immunity. In other words, you don’t respond to vaccines as well, you don’t respond to infections as well” as people of normal weight, Poland said.

Trump takes a statin drug to lower his cholestero­l, and that condition also raises his risk for COVID-19 complicati­ons, doctors said.

Next steps

Doctors likely will check Trump often for any difficulty breathing, coughing or other symptoms, Banach said.

No drugs are known to help for people with no or very mild symptoms. Remdesivir and steroids have shown benefit for certain moderately and severely ill patients.

Trump was given an experiment­al antibody drug that’s currently in latestage studies from Regeneron Pharmaceut­icals Inc.

Antibodies are proteins

the body makes when an infection occurs. They attach to a virus and help it be eliminated. The Regeneron drug is made with purified versions of two such antibodies.

Risk to others

Could Trump have infected Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden during the debate Tuesday night?

Possible, but not likely, experts said. The candidates were more than 6 feet apart. But both candidates, especially Trump, spoke loudly, which research suggests can make virus particles travel farther, Poland said.

Biden said Friday on Twitter that he and his wife, Jill, tested negative.

Dr. George Abraham, who heads the infectious disease board for the American Board of Internal Medicine, warned that “a negative test doesn’t guarantee that someone is not harboring virus” because there might be too little to detect early in infection.

“This is a wakeup call” that shows the need for social distancing, wearing masks and other measures to reduce spread, Abraham said.

Biden similarly tweeted, “I hope this serves as a reminder: wear a mask, keep social distance, and wash your hands.”

A myriad of other people who have been around Trump in the previous 48 hours are at risk, doctors said.

“Contact tracing is going to be really important,” Banach said. “The president comes into contact withmany individual­s during the day.”

 ?? STEVE RUARK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at Harrisburg Internatio­nal Airport in Middletown, Pa on Sept. 26.
STEVE RUARK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE President Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally at Harrisburg Internatio­nal Airport in Middletown, Pa on Sept. 26.

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