Inside the extraordinary effort to save Trump from covid-19
I only excerpted this from WaPO because many readers
can’t read the article (without subscription0mAns we all should know how badly
we were lied to. The man who continued to minimize the dangers of Covid and who
I hold personally responsible for much of the anti-vaxx hysteria surrounding the
Covid vaccine was profoundly ill, but had access to medical care and drugs us
mortals couldn’t have gotten. Even so, he continued playing down this pandemic plague,
endangering the lives of those gullible enough to believe him. What I posted is
just a part of an article in todays WaPo.
His illness was more severe than the White House
acknowledged at the time. Advisers thought it would alter his response to the
pandemic. They were wrong.
Begin WaPo text: Two
days after that, he flew to Cleveland for the first presidential debate against
his Democratic challenger, Joe Biden. Trump was erratic that whole evening, and
he seemed to deteriorate as the night went on. The pundits’ verdicts were
brutal.
Almost 48 hours later, Trump became terribly ill. Hours
after his tweet announcing he and first lady Melania Trump had coronavirus
infections, the president began a rapid spiral downward. His fever spiked, and
his blood oxygen level fell below 94 percent, at one point dipping into the
80s. Sean Conley, the White House physician, attended the president at his
bedside. Trump was given oxygen in an effort to stabilize him.
The doctors gave Trump an eight-gram dose of two monoclonal
antibodies through an intravenous tube. That experimental treatment was what
had required the FDA’s sign-off. He was also given a first dose of the
antiviral drug remdesivir, also by IV. That drug was authorized for use but
still hard to get for many patients because it was in short supply.
Typically, doctors space out treatments to measure a
patient’s response. Some drugs, such as monoclonal antibodies, are most
effective if they’re administered early in the course of an infection. Others,
such as remdesivir, are most effective when they’re given later, after a
patient has become critically ill. But Trump’s doctors threw everything they
could at the virus all at once. His condition appeared to stabilize somewhat as
the day wore on, but his doctors, still fearing he might need to go on a ventilator,
decided to move him to the hospital. It was too risky at that point to stay at
the White House.
Many White House officials and even his closest aides were
kept in the dark about his condition. But after they woke up to the news — many
of them were asleep when Trump tweeted at nearly 1 a.m. on Friday that he had
the virus — Cabinet officials and aides lined up at the White House to get
tested. A large number had met with him the previous week to brief him about
various issues or had traveled with him to the debate.
Trump’s condition worsened early Saturday. His blood oxygen
level dropped to 93 percent, and he was given the powerful steroid
dexamethasone, which is usually administered if someone is extremely ill (the
normal blood oxygen level is between 95 and 100 percent). The drug was believed
to improve survival in coronavirus patients receiving supplemental oxygen. The
president was on a dizzying array of emergency medicines by now — all at once.
At least two of those who were briefed on Trump’s medical
condition that weekend said he was gravely ill and feared that he wouldn’t make
it out of Walter Reed. People close to Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows,
said he was consumed with fear that Trump might die.
It was unclear if one of the medications, or their
combination, helped, but by Saturday afternoon Trump’s condition began
improving. One of the people familiar with Trump’s medical information was
convinced the monoclonal antibodies were responsible for the president’s quick
recovery.
Throughout the day Saturday, Oct. 3, the restless Trump made
a series of phone calls to gauge how his hospitalization was being received by
the public. In all likelihood, the steroid he was taking had given him a burst
of energy, though no one knew how long it would last. Perhaps buoyed by that,
Trump continued to post on Twitter from the hospital, anxious to convey that he
was upright and busy. At one point Trump even called Fauci to discuss his
condition and share his personal assessment of the monoclonal antibodies he had
received. He said it was miraculous how quickly they made him feel much better.”
Jumping to the last two paragraphs:
“But Trump didn’t waver. Facing the cameras from the
balcony, he used his right hand to unhook the mask loop from his right ear,
then raised his left hand to pull the mask off his face. He was heavily made
up, his face more orange tinted than in the photos from the hospital. The
helicopter’s rotors were still spinning. He put the mask into his right pocket,
as if he was discarding it once and for all, then raised both hands in a
thumbs-up. He was still probably contagious, standing there for
all the world to see. He made a military salute as the helicopter departed the
South Lawn, and then strode into the White House, passing staffers on his
way and failing to protect them from the virus particles emitted from his nose
and mouth.
Right then, Redfield (a senior staffer) knew it was over. Trump showed in that moment that he hadn’t changed at all. The pandemic response wasn’t going to change, either.”
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