Albany Times Union

Biden ‘continues to be fit for duty,’ his doctor says

- By Sarlene Superville and Will Weissert

BETHESDA, Md. — President Joe Biden “continues to be fit for duty,” his doctor wrote Wednesday after conducting an annual physical that is being closely watched as the 81-year-old seeks reelection in November.

Dr. Kevin O’connor, Biden’s physician, wrote that the president is adjusting well to a new device that helps control his sleep apnea and has experience­d some hip discomfort but also works out five times per week.

“President Biden is a healthy, active, robust, 81-year-old male who remains fit to successful­ly execute the duties of the presidency,” O’connor said in a six-page memo on the president’s health, following a physical that took Biden to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for more than 2 1/2 hours.

His memo added that Biden “feels well and this year’s physical identifies no new concerns.”

The oldest president in U.S. history, Biden would be 86 by the end of a second term, should he win one. His latest physical mirrored one he had in February last year when O’connor described Biden as “healthy, vigorous” and “fit” to handle his White House duties.

Still, voters are approachin­g this year’s election with misgivings about Biden’s age, having scrutinize­d his gaffes, his coughing, his slow walking and even a tumble off his bicycle.

After he returned to the White House on Wednesday, Biden attended an event on combating crime and suggested that when it came to his health “everything is squared away” and “there is nothing different than last year.”

He also joked about his age and people thinking “I look too young.”

Former President Donald Trump, 77, is the favorite to lock up the Republican nomination later this month, which would bring him closer to a November rematch against Biden. Trump was 70 when he took office in 2017, which made him the oldest American president to be inaugurate­d — until Biden broke his record by being inaugurate­d at 78 in 2021.

O’connor’s report said that Biden’s stiff walking was no worse than last year and was the result of arthritic changes in his spine. He said the president also noted “some increased left hip discomfort.” There were no signs of stroke, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s or other similar conditions in what the report called an “extremely detailed neurologic exam.”

Biden, last summer, began using a continuous positive airway pressure, or CPAP, machine at night to help with sleep apnea, and O’connor wrote that the president had responded well to that treatment and is “diligently compliant” about using it.

A recent special counsel’s report on the investigat­ion into Biden’s handling of classified documents repeatedly derided Biden’s memory, calling it “hazy,” “fuzzy,”

“faulty,” “poor” and having “significan­t limitation­s.” It also noted that Biden could not recall defining milestones in his own life such as when his son Beau died or when he served as vice president.

Still, addressing reporters the evening of the report’s release, Biden said “my memory is fine” and grew visibly angry as he denied forgetting when his son died of brain cancer in 2015 at the age of 46.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-pierre said that O’connor was one of a team of 20 different medical specialist­s who helped complete the physical.

Asked why Biden wasn’t undergoing a cognitive test as part of the physical, Jeanpierre said that O’connor and Biden’s neurologis­t “don’t believe he needs one.”

“He passes a cognitive test every day, every day as he moves from one topic to another topic, understand­ing the granular level of these topics,” Jean-pierre said, noting that Biden tackled such diverse issues as Wednesday’s crime prevention event before his planned trip to the U.s.-mexico border on Thursday and next week’s State of the Union address.

“This is a very rigorous job,” she added. That picture of the president doesn’t reflect the type of struggles with routine tasks that might indicate the need for further tests, said Dr. Michael Rosenbloom, a neurologis­t at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

“Constantly questionin­g older folks who may have an occasional lapse is a form of ageism,” Rosenbloom said.

Many Americans, including Democrats, have expressed reservatio­ns about Biden seeking a second term during this fall’s election. Only 37% of Democrats say Biden should pursue reelection, down from 52% before the 2022 midterm elections, according to a poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

Biden counters that his age brings wisdom, and he has begun to criticize Trump for the former president’s recent public gaffes.

The president joked that his age was classified informatio­n and suggested during a taping in New York on Monday of “Late Night With Seth Meyers” that Trump mistakenly called his wife Melania, “Mercedes” during a weekend speech at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference though the Trump campaign says he was correctly referring to political commentato­r Mercedes Schlapp.

 ?? Yuri Gripas/tns ?? U.S. President Joe Biden departs from the White House for his routine annual physical on Wednesday.
Yuri Gripas/tns U.S. President Joe Biden departs from the White House for his routine annual physical on Wednesday.

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