* Trump's top physician Dr. Sean Conley revealed Sunday he treated the president with a steroid and put him on oxygen Saturday in revealing timeline of treatment
* Conley was forced to explain Sunday that there was confusion over the president's medical condition because Chief of Staff Mark Meadow's comments were falsely represented
* 'The Chief and I work side-by-side,' Conley said of Meadows. 'And I think his statement was misconstrued'
* Meadows went off-the-record with reporters to say that the president's condition was 'concerning'
* 'The president's vitals over the last 24 hours were very concerning and the next 48 hours will be critical in terms of his care. We're still not on a clear path to a full recovery,' it was later revealed Meadows said
* Vice President Mike Pence and Second Lady Karen both tested negative Sunday for coronavirus
* Senior Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller said Sunday Trump is 'ready to get back to the campaign trail'
* Fellow senior campaign adviser Steve Cortes said Sunday that Trump is 'as upbeat and assertive as he's ever been,' adding: 'This president is going to recover'
* Comments come the morning after White House Physician, Navy Commander Dr. Sean Conley, said in a briefing Saturday Trump is 'not yet out of the woods'
* Trump released a video with him working from the Presidential Suite at Walter Reed Saturday evening where he said he will 'be back soon'
The president's doctors said Sunday that he could be discharged from Walter Reed as early as Monday as Trump's top physician detailed he was given a steroid and put on oxygen as a treatment for COVID-19.
'Our plan for today is to have him to eat and drink, be up out of bed as much as possible, to be mobile,' Dr. Brian Garibaldi, one of the doctor's on Trump's team, said. 'And if he continues to look and feel as well as he does today, our hope is that we can plan for a discharge as early as tomorrow to the White House where he can continue his treatment course.'
He also detailed that Trump would continue taking doses of Remdesivir, a broad-spectrum antiviral medication, and dexamethasone, a steroid, whether he remains at Walter Reed or is transferred to the White House.
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WNU Editor: The medical pundits on the major US networks say the President should not be discharged this early. I do not know how they can make that assessment when they are not privy to his medical reports. I just watched a doctor on the CBC in Canada who said that it looks like the President is one of those patients who are lucky. He may not feel well, but it does not justify keeping him in a hospital. So who is right? I do not know, but I guess we will know in the next day or two. But if President Trump is released tomorrow, and it looks like he is recovering quickly from being infected with Covid-19. The optics are going to be huge, and it will have an impact on the US Presidential election. I would not be surprised if both campaigns are making that calculation right now.
Update: The complete Walter Reed news conference on President Trump's health condition is below:
2 comments:
With the president up after a long weekend, how will the legacy media and the DNC continue to scare the populace?
Poll Question: How many people in your country have died from COVID-19?
Americans Answered: 9%
Reality: 0.04%
www.talk104fm.com/2020/07/30/poll-finds-americans-believe-nine-percent-of-people-in-the-us-have-died-from-the-coronavirus-225-times-more-than-actually-have/
It is not such a deadly disease as the president can show.
It is not such a deadly disease when you compare and contrast it to other flu's.
I came up with the same figure months ago using the Pasadena Star News died and infected numbers around May and a figure of 303 million population.
The unanswered question is how many died from the virus and how many died with it. Like men and prostrate cancer. Most live a long time with it, the VA tells me and pass from something else.
The press does not want to let a good hysteria story die. Not when it involves DJT, methinks.
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