Trump's case of coronavirus was far worse than he
admitted, report says
Officials feared president would need a ventilator as
he faced extremely low oxygen levels, New York Times reports
Maanvi
Singh
@maanvissingh
Thu 11 Feb
2021 23.40 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/11/trump-coronavirus-ventilator-covid-illness
Donald
Trump was reportedly much more ill with Covid-19 in October than the White
House publicly admitted at the time, with some officials concerned that he
would need to be put on a ventilator.
Trump
experienced “extremely depressed blood oxygen levels” and a lung problem
commonly associated with pneumonia caused by Covid-19, according to a report in
the New York Times citing four people familiar with the former president’s
condition.
Trump was
admitted to Walter Reed national military medical center for several days in
early October after he tested positive for the virus, less than a month before
the presidential election. At the time, a White House memo described the
74-year-old as “fatigued but in good spirits”.
Dr Sean
Conley, the personal physician charged with steering the US president back to
health through his encounter with Covid-19, was widely criticized for his vague
statements on Trump’s condition one day after he was admitted to hospital,
including when answering questions about the president’s oxygen levels. Conley
gave an upbeat assessment, saying Trump was “doing very well” and there was “no
cause for concern”.
However,
the Times reports that officials found Trump’s prognosis so concerning before
he was taken to the hospital that they were worried he would have to be put on
a ventilator. Two people familiar with Trump’s condition told the paper the
president had lung infiltrates, which can be a sign of severe illness in
Covid-19 patients who are also exhibiting other symptoms.
Trump’s
blood oxygen levels were also reportedly a source of alarm as they fell into
the 80s – far lower than the the low 90s that are considered a sign of a severe
case.
Trump drew
rebuke from doctors for staging a surprise drive-by visit to supporters outside
the military medical center two days after he was admitted for treatment. At
least two secret service agents were seen in the vehicle accompanying Trump
during the short drive.
At the
time, James Phillips, an attending physician at Walter Reed, called the stunt
“insanity”.
Trump, who
repeatedly undermined and downplayed the severity of the pandemic and its
soaring death toll, at times suggested that his own recovery was proof that the
virus was not as big a threat as public health officials made it out to be.
Upon
returning to the White House after his illness, Trump told supporters: “You’re
going to beat it [coronavirus] … As your leader, I had to do that. I knew
there’s danger to it, but I had to do it. I stood out front, and led.”
Not long after
Trump’s recovery, the US entered its most deadly stage of the pandemic. More
than 27 million people have been infected and 474,000 have died in the US
alone, the highest tolls of any country in the world by far.


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