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Trump in excellent health and with normal score on a cognitive exam

Wednesday, January 17th 2018 - 09:05 UTC
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Navy Rear Admiral. Ronny L. Jackson, said that he has interacted with the president several times a day for the past year and saw no need for a cognitive test. Navy Rear Admiral. Ronny L. Jackson, said that he has interacted with the president several times a day for the past year and saw no need for a cognitive test.
Jackson recommended that the president eat a healthier diet, exercise regularly and lose 4 to 7kgs. Jackson recommended that the president eat a healthier diet, exercise regularly and lose 4 to 7kgs.

President Donald Trump requested that his first formal medical exam include a cognitive test and “did exceedingly well,” receiving a score of 30 out of 30, the top White House doctor announced on Tuesday afternoon.

 Navy Rear Admiral. Ronny L. Jackson, who has been the lead White House doctor since 2013, said that he has interacted with the president several times a day for the past year and saw no need for a cognitive test. Jackson said that the president is “very sharp” in their conversations and does not repeat himself. He added that he has seen no evidence of any cognitive problems.

US President Donald Trump had a normal score on a cognitive exam and is in excellent health, according to the White House physician.

At the president's request, Jackson said that he reviewed a number of cognitive tests and then administered the Montreal Cognitive Assessment during Trump's first presidential physical exam on Friday afternoon at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. The 10-minute exam is designed to detect mild cognitive impairment, generally in older patients. Trump answered all 30 questions correctly, Jackson said.

The test includes asking a patient to name several animals, draw a clock with the hands at a certain time, copy a cube and recall a short list of words, among others. Jackson said he has “no indication whatsoever that he has any cognitive issues.”

“I find no reason whatsoever to think the president has any issues whatsoever with his thought process,” Jackson said.

Jackson said that based on Trump's lab results and cardiac tests, he is “very healthy” and he expects the president to continue to be healthy for the rest of his term and even in a second term.

Undergoing this physical is voluntary, and under federal medical privacy laws Trump can pick and choose what the public hears about his health. Jackson said that there is “absolutely nothing” that is being withheld from the public and that Trump's release of information is “hands down” the broadest in history.

Trump, 71, is 190 centimeters tall and his weight is 108 kilograms, which is considered overweight by the medical community and just short of obese, Jackson said. He said that he recommended that the president eat a healthier diet, exercise regularly and lose 4 to 7kgs.

The president's weight is 1.3kgs higher than it was during the campaign in September 2016, according to a letter Trump released from his personal physician in New York, Harold N. Bornstein.

That letter reported his cholesterol levels were controlled with medication and were within the healthy range for a man his age. Jackson said that Trump's cholesterol level is now elevated, so he is increasing Trump's medication.

Trump's cholesterol of 223 is elevated and his low-density lipoprotein of 143 is borderline high. Jackson said he hopes to bring down the LDL or “bad cholesterol” score with diet, exercise and statin medication.

When asked whether Trump has a daily exercise regiment, Jackson said no. “We can build on that very easily,” he said.

Trump has made no attempt to hide his weakness for unhealthy foods, posting a photo of himself aboard his campaign plane with a bucket of fried chicken, bragging about the chocolate cake at his Mar-a-Lago resort and drinking Diet Coke around the West Wing.

Categories: Politics, United States.

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