WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 President had an annual physical Friday and concluded, 鈥淚 did well,鈥 praising his own heart, soul and cognitive ability while noting medical reports from White House doctors may not be ready until the weekend.
The 78-year-old, who in January became to be sworn in as president, spent nearly five hours at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center undergoing what he called "every test you can imagine.鈥
鈥淚 was there for a long time,鈥 Trump said. 鈥淚 think I did very well.鈥
Despite long questioning predecessor physical and mental capacity, Trump has routinely kept basic facts about his own health shrouded in secrecy 鈥 shying away from traditional presidential transparency on medical issues. He said he believes the doctor's report on his latest physical would be ready on Sunday 鈥 though, if history is any indication, that may offer little more than flattery with scarce detail.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said while Trump was still being examined that a 鈥渞eadout from the White House physician鈥 on his health that would be released 鈥渁s soon as we possibly can鈥 and suggested it鈥檇 be comprehensive.
Trump went straight from the examination to Air Force One to fly to Florida for the weekend. Speaking to reporters midflight, he said doctors offered him 鈥渁 little bit鈥 of advice on lifestyle changes that could improve his health, though he didn't elaborate on what that was.
鈥漁verall, I felt I was in very good shape. A good heart, a good soul, a very good soul," Trump said. He also noted that he took a cognitive test. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what to tell you other than I got every answer right,鈥 he said.
He said undergoing mental acuity screening was 鈥渨hat the American people want鈥 and took another shot at his predecessor, saying, 鈥淏iden refused to take it.鈥
The finished medical report would be the first public information on Trump's health since in Butler, Pennsylvania, in July.
Rather than release medical records at that time, Texas Rep. 鈥 a staunch supporter who served as his White House physician and once joked in the White House briefing room that Trump could live to be 200 if he had a healthier diet 鈥 describing a gunshot wound to Trump鈥檚 right ear.
In a subsequent interview with CBS last August, Trump said he鈥檇 鈥渧ery gladly鈥 release his medical records, but never did.
Trump is three years younger than Biden. But on Inauguration Day of his second term in January, Trump was five months older than Biden was during his 2021 inauguration 鈥 making Trump the nation's oldest president to be sworn into office.
Presidents have privacy rights protecting their medical records just like ordinary citizens, and that means they have leeway over what details are released. Modern annual physicals, though, have often played key roles in offering the public a sense of the commander-in-chief's health.
Trump has long opted for offering few substantive details about his health. Before Jackson's memo, the public hadn't seen key details since November 2023, when Dr. Bruce A. Aronwald released a letter to coincide with , saying Trump was in 鈥渆xcellent鈥 physical and mental health.
The letter, posted on Trump鈥檚 social media platform, lacks the basics 鈥 such as the Republican's weight, blood pressure and cholesterol levels, or the results of any test. Instead, Aronwald wrote that he'd examined Trump that fall and found his 鈥減hysical exams were well within the normal range and his cognitive exams were exceptional,鈥 while also noting that Trump had 鈥渞educed his weight.鈥
Trump was treated at Walter Reed, located in Bethesda, Maryland, outside Washington, for in 2020. During that time, Trump鈥檚 physician offered a rosy prognosis on his condition, though White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said some of Trump鈥檚 vital signs were 鈥渧ery concerning."
After Trump recovered, more details emerged that he had been sicker than he'd let on.
In November 2019, meanwhile, Trump's trip to Walter Reed for a physical was omitted from his public schedule, breaking the White House protocol of giving advance public notice of them.
The visit was revealed three days later, with Trump disclosing that he'd had The White House released a subsequent statement from the president鈥檚 then-personal physician, , saying it had been a 鈥減lanned interim checkup鈥 kept "off the record鈥 due to scheduling uncertainties.
Arguably, Trump's most famous past comments about his own health came during a television interview in July 2020, when he listed off 鈥淧erson. Woman. Man. Camera. TV" while attempting to demonstrate his cognitive abilities.
Trump said that a collection of those five nouns, or ones like them, stated in order, demonstrated mental fitness and were part of a cognitive test he had aced. The president was asked about that test again on Air Force One on Friday and responded, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a pretty well known test.鈥
"Whatever it is, I got every one 鈥 I got it all right,鈥 he said.
Will Weissert, The Associated Press