San Diego Union-Tribune

Secret Service agents, doctors aghast at Trump’s foray outside hospital.

President accused of being indifferen­t to security team’s safety

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Secret Service agents and medical profession­als were aghast Sunday night at President Donald Trump’s Sunday evening trip outside the hospital where he is being treated for the coronaviru­s, saying the president endangered those inside his SUV for a publicity stunt.

As the backlash grew, aides who were not authorized to speak publicly also called Trump’s outing to wave at supportive crowds an unnecessar­y risk, but said the move was not surprising. Trump had said he was bored in the hospital, advisers said. He wanted to show strength after his chief of staff offered a grimmer assessment of his health than doctors, according to campaign and White House officials.

A growing number of Secret Service agents have been concerned about the president’s seeming indifferen­ce to the health risks they face when traveling with him in public, and a few reacted with outrage to the trip, asking how Trump’s desire to be seen outside of his hospital suite justified the jeopardy to agents protecting the president. The president’s coronaviru­s diagnosis has already brought new scrutiny to his lax approach to social distancing, as public health officials scramble to trace those he may have exposed at large in-person events.

“He’s not even pretending to care now,” said one agent after the president’s jaunt outside Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

“Where are the adults?” said a former Secret Service member.

They spoke on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retributio­n.

White House spokesman Judd Deere defended the outing, telling reporters that “appropriat­e precaution­s were taken in the execution of this movement to protect the president and all those supporting it.” Deere said precaution­s included personal protective equipment, without providing further details.

Trump wore a mask as he waved to a crowd from the back of his vehicle, after announcing that he would “pay a little surprise to some of the great patriots that we have out on the street.” But the face covering was little comfort to doctors, who took to Twitter to criticize the trip as irresponsi­ble. Masks “help, but they are not an impenetrab­le force field,” tweeted Saad Omer, director of the Yale Institute for Global Health.

Among critics was a doctor affiliated with Walter Reed.

“Every single person in the vehicle during that completely unnecessar­y Presidenti­al ‘ drive-by’ just now has to be quarantine­d for 14 days,” tweeted Dr. James Phillips, who is also a professor at George Washington University. “They might get sick. They may die. For political theater. Commanded by Trump to put their lives at risk for theater. This is insanity.”

Phillips said the risk of viral transmissi­on inside the car is “as high as it gets outside of medical procedures.” Jonathan Reiner, a professor of medicine and surgery at George Washington University, noted that people inside a hospital wear extensive protective gear — gowns, gloves, N95 masks and more - when they will be in close contact with a coronaviru­s patient such as Trump.

“By taking a joy ride outside Walter Reed the president is placing his Secret Service detail at grave risk,” he tweeted.

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