Los Angeles Times

Austin’s hospitaliz­ation was for prostate cancer

Doctors anticipate a full recovery by the Defense secretary, who had surgery and a related infection.

- By Lolita C. Baldor, Tara Copp, Seung Min Kim and Zeke Miller Baldor, Copp, Kim and Miller write for the Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III has prostate cancer, and his recent secretive hospitaliz­ation was for surgery and to treat a urinary tract infection related to that operation, his doctors said Tuesday.

Austin, 70, was admitted to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Dec. 22 and underwent surgery to treat the cancer. He developed the infection a week later. President Biden and other senior administra­tion officials were not told for days about his cancer or hospitaliz­ation.

According to the doctors, the cancer was detected when Austin had a regular screening in early December. They said he “underwent a minimally invasive surgical procedure” and went home the next day. But on Jan. 1 he reported nausea and abdominal, hip and leg pain due to the infection.

The doctors said the prostate cancer was detected early, and his prognosis is excellent.

The revelation follows days of questions about Austin’s hospitaliz­ation and the delays in notifying leaders. And it raises more questions about the transparen­cy and truthfulne­ss of the Defense Department, which for four days said Austin was at Walter Reed for an “elective medical procedure.”

Asked Tuesday about that wording, Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, the Pentagon press secretary, said it was developed in consultati­on with Austin’s doctors. When pressed on the delays in public notificati­on, Ryder said, “Despite the frequency of prostate cancer, discussion­s about screening, treatment and support are often deeply personal and private ones.”

It was not clear Tuesday how the illness will affect Austin’s work, travel or public engagement­s.

The lack of transparen­cy about Austin’s hospitaliz­ation — including the failure to tell Biden and other top officials about it for days — has triggered sharp criticism. Several Republican lawmakers said Austin should be ousted. Earlier Tuesday, the White House chief of staff ordered Cabinet members to notify his office if they ever can’t perform their duties.

Drs. John Maddox and Gregory Chesnut of Walter Reed provided the first details of Austin’s prognosis in a statement put out by the Pentagon. They said he was under anesthesia during the initial surgery and, when he went to intensive care Jan. 2, the infection had triggered an intestinal backup, and his stomach had to be drained with a tube in his nose.

“We anticipate a full recovery, although this can be a slow process,” the doctors said. They noted that prostate cancer is the most common cancer among U.S. men, affecting 1 in 8. (Among African American men, the rate is 1 in 6.)

The Biden administra­tion, reeling from Austin’s surprise illness, is mounting a policy review. The Pentagon has launched its own review.

White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients, in a memo to Cabinet secretarie­s, directed that they send by Friday any procedures for delegating authority in the event of incapacita­tion or loss of communicat­ion.

While the review is ongoing, he is requiring agencies to notify his office and the Office of Cabinet Affairs if an agency experience­s or plans to experience a circumstan­ce in which a Cabinet head can’t perform his or her duties.

Biden and other top officials weren’t informed for days that Austin had turned over power to his deputy. A Pentagon spokesman blamed the lapse on a key staffer being out with the f lu.

“Agencies should ensure that delegation­s are issued when a Cabinet Member is traveling to areas with limited or no access to communicat­ion, undergoing hospitaliz­ation or a medical procedure requiring general anesthesia, or otherwise in a circumstan­ce when he or she may be unreachabl­e,” Zients’ memo states. It also requires that agencies document when any such transfer of authoritie­s occurs and that the person serving in the acting role promptly establish contact with relevant White House staff.

During Austin’s two hospitaliz­ations, he transferre­d some of his authoritie­s to Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks, but she was not told why. The White House was not informed that Austin was in the hospital until Thursday, and the public and Congress didn’t learn of it until Friday.

The Pentagon issued a memo Monday on its internal review and broadened the circle of leaders who would be informed of any delegation of authoritie­s by the Defense secretary to ensure that, in the future, “proper and timely notificati­on has been made to the President and White House and, as appropriat­e, the United States Congress and the American public.”

Going forward, any time authority is transferre­d, a wider swath of officials will be notified, including the Pentagon’s general counsel, the chair and vice chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the combatant commanders, service secretarie­s, the service chiefs of staff, the White House situation room and the senior staff of the secretary and deputy secretary of Defense.

 ?? DEFENSE SECRETARY Volodymyr Tarasov Ukrinform/Future Publishing ?? Lloyd J. Austin III entered the hospital Dec. 22. President Biden and other senior officials were not told for days.
DEFENSE SECRETARY Volodymyr Tarasov Ukrinform/Future Publishing Lloyd J. Austin III entered the hospital Dec. 22. President Biden and other senior officials were not told for days.

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