Irish Independent

Trump ‘wrote his own glowing medical report’

- Rachael Alexander

A LETTER from US President Donald Trump’s New York physician released by his campaign in 2015 declaring he would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency” was composed by the candidate himself, the doctor has revealed.

Harold Bornstein, Mr Trump’s long-time personal doctor, described the alleged incident in a number of interviews, during which he also claimed Mr Trump’s bodyguard took possession of the president’s medical records in an episode that felt like a “raid”.

With his long flowing hair and large glasses, Dr Bornstein became a colourful character in Mr Trump’s unlikely 2016 campaign for the presidency.

In a letter released in December 2015, Dr Bornstein wrote that Mr Trump would “unequivoca­lly” be the healthiest president in history and deemed the celebrity businessma­n’s condition “astonishin­gly excellent”.

Dr Bornstein has said in the past he wrote the note about Mr Trump’s health in five minutes while a limo sent by the candidate waited outside his office.

He elaborated on that, saying the missive was composed by the candidate himself.

“He dictated that whole letter. I didn’t write that letter,” Dr Bornstein told CNN.

“Mr Trump has had a recent complete medical examinatio­n that showed only positive results,” said the letter signed by Dr Bornstein, who said he had treated Mr Trump since 1980.

“Actually, his blood pressure, 110/65, and laboratory results were astonishin­gly excellent. His physical strength and stamina are extraordin­ary,” the letter said. “If elected, Mr Trump, I can state unequivoca­lly, will be the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency.”

Mr Trump read out the language as Dr Bornstein and his wife were driving across New York’s Central Park, the doctor told CNN.

“(Trump) dictated the letter and I would tell him what he couldn’t put in there,” he said.

Dr Bornstein also told NBC News that Keith Schiller, the president’s long-time bodyguard and former director of Oval Office operations, showed up at his office in February 2017 along with two other men to collect the records, leaving Dr Bornstein feeling “raped, frightened and sad”.

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders disputed the doctor’s characteri­sation of the episode.

“As is standard operating procedure for a new president, the White House medical unit took possession of the president’s medical records,” she told reporters at a White House briefing. As for Dr Bornstein’s descriptio­n that it had the feel of a raid, she said: “No, that is not my understand­ing.”

Dr Bornstein told NBC that Mr Schiller and another “large man” were in his office about 30 minutes and “created a lot of chaos”.

The doctor said the two men were joined by Alan Garten, the chief legal officer for the Trump Organisati­on.

A spokeswoma­n for the Trump Organisati­on did not respond to a request for comment.

The incident at Dr Bornstein’s office came two days after the doctor told ‘The New York Times’ that Mr Trump takes propecia, a drug for enlarged prostates that is often prescribed to stimulate hair growth in men.

Dr Bornstein told the ‘Times’ that he prescribed Mr Trump drugs for rosacea and cholestero­l as well.

Dr Bornstein told NBC that Mr Trump’s long-time personal secretary called him after the story ran and said: “So you wanted to be the White House doctor? Forget it, you’re out.”

Dr Bornstein said he wasn’t given a form authorisin­g him to release Mr Trump’s records, but said Mr Schiller and Mr Garten took the originals and copies of Mr Trump’s charts and lab reports, including records filed under pseudonyms the office used.

Questions were raised about the legality of the seizure.

Patients have a right to a copy of their medical records but the original physical record belongs to the doctor, said Dr Matthew Wynia, director of the centre for bioethics and humanities at the University of Colorado.

“If a patient wants a copy, they can have a copy, but they don’t get the original.

“Patients can also ask for their records to be transferre­d to a new doctor, but that also involves making copies (ie, transferri­ng the informatio­n), not literally packaging up the originals and sending them off,” Dr Wynia said in an email.

Most states require doctors to keep and maintain records, Dr Wynia said. (© Daily Telegraph, London)

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 ??  ?? Ex-bodyguard Keith Schiller took possession of President Trump’s records, doctor claims
Ex-bodyguard Keith Schiller took possession of President Trump’s records, doctor claims

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