Cape Breton Post

Trump’s condition improving, return to Washington expected

- ALEXANDRA ALPER DOINA CHIACU REUTERS

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s condition is improving as he is being treated for COVID-19 at a military hospital, and he could return to the White House as early as today, where his treatment would continue, the doctors leading his treatment said on Sunday.

Doctors provided Trump supplement­al oxygen twice during his battle with the lung disease, on Thursday and Friday, and have also given him dexamethas­one, they told reporters the day after a series of contradict­ory messages from the White House caused widespread confusion about Trump’s condition.

Dexamethas­one is shown in studies to improve survival for patients hospitaliz­ed with critical COVID-19 who need extra oxygen. But it should not be given in mild cases since it can limit the body’s own ability to combat the virus, according to guidelines from the Infectious Disease Society of America.

“The fact of the matter is that he’s doing really well,” Dr. Sean P. Conley told reporters at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where Trump has been receiving treatment since Friday.

Doctors said Trump had not run a fever since Friday and that his liver and kidney function remained normal after the second dose in a five-day course of Remdesivir, an intravenou­s antiviral drug sold by Gilead Sciences Inc that has been shown to shorten hospital stays.

Dr Brian Garibaldi said Trump was given dexamethas­one in response to “transient low oxygen levels.”

“He received his first dose of that yesterday and our plan is to continue that for the time being,” Garibaldi said.

Trump is also being given an experiment­al treatment, Regeneron’s REGN-COV2, as well as zinc, Vitamin D, famotidine, melatonin and aspirin, his doctors have said.

Trump released a fourminute video on Saturday in which he said the “real test” of his condition will come over the next few days.

“Over the next period of a few days, I guess that’s the real test, so we’ll be seeing what happens over those next couple of days,” Trump said into the camera, looking tired and wearing a jacket and opennecked shirt.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll published on Sunday found that Biden had opened a 10-point lead over Trump nationally, slightly wider than it has been for the past two months. Some 65 per cent of Americans said Trump likely would not have been infected had he taken the virus more seriously — a view that half of registered Republican­s polled supported. Some 55 per cent said they did not believe Trump had been telling the truth about the virus.

Trump has repeatedly played down the threat of the pandemic, even as it has killed more than 208,000 Americans and hammered the U.S. economy.

 ?? REUTERS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump works in a conference room at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland while receiving treatment for COVID-19 on Saturday.
REUTERS U.S. President Donald Trump works in a conference room at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland while receiving treatment for COVID-19 on Saturday.

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