Orlando Sentinel

Trump’s weekend hospital visit draws skeptical reaction

- By Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON — A lack of notice. Past failures to level with the American people. A tough week for the White House as public impeachmen­t hearings got under way.

Add it all up, and President Donald Trump’s unschedule­d weekend visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center raised suspicions about his health, despite White House officials’ insistence that the president was merely getting a head start on his annual physical.

For any president, a sudden trip to the hospital would raise questions. But such scrutiny was magnified with a president who has a history of exaggerati­on and playing loose with the facts, giving skeptics room to run with their own theories.

“The one thing you can be absolutely sure of is this was not routine and he didn’t go up there for half his physical,” tweeted Joe Lockhart, a press secretary under President Bill Clinton, who was himself impeached for perjury and obstructio­n. “What does it mean? It means that we just won’t know what the medical issue was.”

The president’s medical appointmen­t wasn’t listed on his Saturday public schedule, and his last physical was just nine months ago. White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said the 73-year-old president was “anticipati­ng a very busy 2020” and wanted to take advantage of “a free weekend” in Washington to begin portions of his routine checkup.

She did not specify which tests he’d received or explain why the visit had not been disclosed in advance. Trump’s 2018 and 2019 physicals were both announced ahead of time. Grisham said after the visit that the president had gotten “a quick exam and labs.”

“The President remains healthy and energetic without complaints, as demonstrat­ed by his repeated vigorous rally performanc­es in front of thousands of Americans several times a week,” she said.

But some weren’t buying Grisham’s explanatio­n.

“The real Donald Trump is getting exposed for what he’s done, and that’s what’s driving him to the doctor,” Rahm Emanuel, a former Clinton aide and Chicago mayor, said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.”

Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, said it’s reasonable for the press to be asking questions about the president’s health. She said the country has a long history of presidents hiding physical ailments from the public.

Woodrow Wilson suffered a paralytic stroke in 1919 and the full details of his disability were kept from the public.

Franklin D. Roosevelt won a fourth term despite severe hypertensi­on that would contribute to his death 11 weeks into his term.

Dwight D. Eisenhower suffered a heart attack in his first term, in 1955, and a reassessme­nt of his medical records and public informatio­n four decades later found that the informatio­n released to the public was recast to serve the president’s political interests ahead of his 1956 reelection campaign.

Jamieson noted that Trump was criticized for releasing only cursory details on his health before the election. The president’s doctor, Harold Bornstein, wrote in December 2015 that Trump would “unequivoca­lly” be the healthiest president in history and deemed the businessma­n’s condition “astonishin­gly excellent.”

Bornstein later said he wrote the note in five minutes while a limo sent by the candidate waited outside his office.

Jamieson said there is a set of expectatio­ns about how a president’s annual exam is handled, which includes the advance public notice that the Trump

White House provided for his first two exams. She said the reasonable question is: “If this is routine, why was it not handled in a routine manner?”

Grisham said everything the White House has said about the Walter Reed visit is “true and accurate.”

“Just because it was done a little differentl­y doesn’t mean anything is wrong,” she said.

Trump and the White House have characteri­zed the visit as “phase 1” of his annual physical. But the explanatio­n raised questions simply because its handling was unusual.

First, annual physicals typically aren’t performed in installmen­ts unless someone needs a special test not available at their doctor’s office — something that shouldn’t be an issue at a military hospital. Nor are they usually performed three months early; Trump’s last physical was last February.

Some lab tests might be performed every few months if a doctor suspects a problem, but otherwise blood tests such as a check of whether Trump’s medication is keeping his high cholestero­l in check normally would be performed at the one-year mark.

His prior physicals were scheduled in advance not only because that’s how doctors schedule everyone’s “wellness” checkups — even VIPs — but because a presidenti­al visit to a hospital prompts extra security concerns.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States