WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump (pix) posted a video Saturday from the hospital where he is battling Covid-19, saying he was improving and would be âback soonâ but acknowledged that the crucial coming days would be âthe real test.â
âI came here, wasnât feeling so well. I feel much better now,â Trump said from his business suite at the Walter Reed military medical center near Washington.
âWeâre working hard to get me all the way back… I think Iâll be back soon and I look forward to finishing up the campaign the way it was started.â
Appearing relaxed in an open-collar shirt and blue suit jacket, Trump acknowledged that there was uncertainty about the course of the disease, which can hit recovering patients hard with no warning.
âIâm starting to feel good. You donât know over the next period of a few days, I guess thatâs the real test, so weâll be seeing what happens over those next couple of days.â
Late Saturday, White House doctor Sean Conley said Trump was ânot yet out of the woods,â but that the medical team is âcautiously optimistic.â
The report from Conley came after a source familiar with the presidentâs health — later named in US media as White House chief of staff Mark Meadows — gave a much more worrying assessment.
âThe presidentâs vitals over the last 24 hours were very concerning and the next 48 hours will be critical in terms of his care,â he said. âWeâre still not on a clear path to a full recovery.â
The White House has not commented officially and Meadows had asked to speak off-the-record before his name appeared as the source in The New York Times and other US outlets.
In his latest update, Conley said Trump had âmade substantial progress since diagnosis, and remained âfever-free and off supplemental oxygen.â
Trump, 74, had completed a second dose of therapeutic drug remdesivir and had spent âmost of the afternoon conducting business,â Conley added.
A second doctor, Sean Dooley, said earlier in the day that the presidentâs cardiac, kidney and liver functions were ânormal.â
Conley was evasive when asked earlier whether the president had received supplementary oxygen at any point since falling ill, only confirming that he hadnât received any at the hospital or on Thursday — the day of his positive test.
Several US media outlets said Trump was on oxygen at the White House on Friday before being admitted to Walter Reed.
âWhite House clusterâ
Conley added to the confusion by suggesting that Trump had been diagnosed on Wednesday — not on Thursday, per the official account — but he later said he had misspoken.
Soon after Trump arrived at the hospital, Conley said in a memo the president was starting a course of remdesivir and had received an eight-gram dose of an experimental antibody cocktail.
Neither Trumpâs doctors nor the White House explained why the president was taking unproven drugs if his progress was satisfactory.
Trumpâs optimism over his recovery prospects has been tempered by news that more people close to the president have tested positive for the coronavirus.
The latest is campaign advisor Chris Christie, who was among several aides that helped Trump prepare for the first presidential debate who have since announced positive tests.
Christie and a number of senators and Trump aides are also among a growing list from the presidentâs orbit to have tested positive for coronavirus after attending an event in the White House Rose Garden last weekend.
The so-called âWhite House clusterâ includes the presidentâs wife Melania, close confidante Hope Hicks, former White House top aide Kellyanne Conway, campaign manager Bill Stepien and Republican senators Thom Tillis and Mike Lee.
Heightening the sense of crisis at the heart of power in America, a third Republican senator, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, announced on Saturday that he had tested positive.
âFalse sense of comfortâ
Public health experts have expressed alarm at the outbreak linked to the September 26 celebration of conservative judge Amy Coney Barrettâs nomination to the Supreme Court.
âThey relied too much on diagnostic testing. We know that these tests have a very high false negative rate,â said Ali Nouri, president of the Federation of American Scientists.
Trump — who is well behind his 77-year-old Democratic election rival Joe Biden in the polls — has been forced to freeze or rework much of his campaign ahead of a potentially messy vote on November 3.
Among the unknowns were the prospects for two remaining presidential debates and whether the president will have to yield power temporarily to Vice President Mike Pence if his condition worsens.
Biden has made Trumpâs frequent downplaying of the Covid-19 crisis and mixed messaging on mask-wearing a central campaign theme.
The former vice president, who stood on a stage with Trump for 90 minutes during their ill-tempered first debate Tuesday, announced that he and his wife Jill tested negative Friday.
Biden reminded voters during the debate that he has pushed consistently for a serious approach to the coronavirus, which has killed more than 208,000 Americans, unlike his opponent who has mocked the Democrat for his rigorous use of masks. –AFP









