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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Roberts, John G.: Files Folder Title: JGR/President's Health (1 of 5) Box: 43 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON March 22, 1985 MEMORANDUM FOR FRED F. FIELDING FROM: JOHN G. ROBERTS DR SUBJECT: Presidential Health Reports In response to your inquiry concerning Presidential health reports, I examined the United States Code and Code of Federal Regulations, the Public Papers of the Presidents from the Eisenhower Administration to the present, and the assorted volumes on the Presidency in the library. I also conducted a media search and discussed the issue with Professor Meador and, at Professor Meador's suggestion, Dr. Kenneth Crispell of the University of Virginia Medical School. What I was able to learn is best characterized as diverting rather than illuminating. I have found no law specifically concerning Presidential health records. To the extent the records are White House documents and retained in the White House, they would not be subject to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Kissinger V. Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, 445 U.S. 136, 156 (1980). If the records cannot be characterized as White House documents, the question of their disclosure in response to a FOIA request would turn on the applicability of 5 U.S.C. § 552 (b) (6). Exemption (b) (6) exempts from disclosure "personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy." Courts have interpreted the exemption as requiring courts to balance the personal privacy interest against the public interest in disclosure; how a court would rule with respect to any particular Presidential medical record would depend, of course, on the particular circumstances. Dr. Crispell has authored a soon-to-be-published book on the health of Presidents. According to Crispell, secrecy has been the rule with respect to an incumbent's medical state, at lease until the Eisenhower Administration. In fact, some White Houses pursued an active policy of disinformation, and in some cases (e.g., Kennedy) the refusal to disclose medical information persists long after the individual's death. President Cleveland's physician baldly lied about Cleveland's operation for cancer (which took place on a yacht for added secrecy); an elaborate conspiracy kept the details of Wilson's debilitating stroke from the public and Congress. Crispell considers the most successful cover-up to have been that of President Kennedy's Addison's disease. - 2 - Episodic medical reports of considerable detail were prompted by Eisenhower's heart attack and Johnson's similar attack and celebrated surgery. A student of Presidential illness wrote (in 1977) that "probably no President's illnesses were as fully and graphically described as those of Dwight Eisenhower." Riccards, "The Presidency: In Sickness and in Health," 7 Presidential Studies Quarterly 215, 227. After his coronary Eisenhower himself instructed his aides to "Tell the truth, the whole truth; don't try to conceal anything." Extensive and detailed information was provided on Eisenhower's health problems, but only as the problems arose -- not on a regular basis. Eisenhower's medical reporting did not establish a precedent because it was associated with specific medical crises. Indeed, Eisenhower's successor actively concealed his Addison's disease and his use of steroids. All avowed Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates released medical records in 1976, probably because of the Eagleton imbroglio in 1972. President Ford was the first incumbent to release all the details of his routine physical, in January of 1976, despite the objection of long-time White House physician Dr. William Lukash. According to U.S. News & World Report, Lukash feared Ford's disclosure would harm the confidential patient-physician relationship and create a "bad precedent." The issue is hotly debated, but it is still considered a violation of medical ethics, according to the AMA Judicial Council, for a physician to discuss the health of a public figure patient with the press without the patient's consent. The Council has urged public figures to release the details of their health, however, and has stated that physicians should encourage their public figure patients to do SO. Several commentators have gone so far as to call for medical disclosure laws similar to financial disclosure laws, and even an independent board of medical examiners to provide an "objective" assessment of the health of candidates and officials. In short, there is no law on the subject, and any "precedent" in favor of detailed disclosure is of only recent origin. Lukash's fear in 1976 was well-founded, however, and any refusal to release the details of routine examinations would now likely be interpreted as a "cover-up." The Eisenhower and Johnson precedents also suggest the need for full disclosue with respect to major medical episodes. The precedent with respect to non-routine testing or more minor problems is less clear, however, and I for one am not certain what public interest was advanced, for example, by the publicity surrounding President Carter's hemorrhoids. bate- Prey Health - Pray Does - books (library) - stories extent of release regioned -predents? - material available IKE heart attach, Sent 20 1955 "Tell the truth, the whole tatl; and to to consent anythi. " Anham, 272 FOIA? bitl: seguestration 1 JFK results 128 LBJ: electrocalizion in mollet 169 sear 173 Siday: mobin atatement on mallet lealth been doctor soll atos: like, as well (why Dead 1. eximinal telail 2. Oylata, Ford 3. this 4. commuting (decline, idgelet) at have a 1 med Setool Health of Hewer : Chienell: ww FOR medical Adbin I'me JPK publics Chandill most not made public (s.ct. care) /. law : more 2. FOIA : exception; W.H. exerytion (6)(6) 3. POTVS statements 4. Presedent - Crimell - books - Does - within sent ( Car canther output) - Emilines - JFK sequestered Cartony sent) - later Crispell: duty billetin hush hund whit IKE when IKE sich ) Physics because politicyed JFK biggest false statement me: Address discose Calidates tell public about health FOR 28 this posital mothing in regular boirs, until LBJ; Nin for sure Conter had it L no livense patient physics infilatility N.Y. TIMES: 10-11-84 Reagan's Health: How Issue Emerged M400 By ALEX S. JONES A130 age and fitness to hold office. news reports and, on NBC, John Chan- Why did the issue of President Rea- But not for want of effort by some cellor touched upon it in a commen- gan's fitness for office because of his members of the Democratic campaign tary. All mentioned the Wall Street age and health vault into headlines this staff, and especially by Mr. Coelho, Journal story. week? who is chairman of the Democratic On Wednesday morning, The Wash- Mr. Reagan, at 73 years of age, is the Congressional Campaign Committee. ington Post, The Philadelphia Inquirer oldest United States President, and his After the debate, Mr. Coelho spoke and USA Today carried front page sto- age has been an issue freely with reporters about the age ries addressing the issue and The New since before he took office. issue. He continued to do so the next York Times published a column on its News But only since his debate morning on the Mondale campaign Op-Ed page by James Reston on the Analysys with Walter F. Mondale plane as it flew from Louisville, Ky., subject. Sunday night has the issue where the debate took place, to Wash- Also on Wednesday, reporters for the been dealt with at length ington. first time after the debate pressed Mr. this year by newspapers and television "Reagan showed his age," Mr. Regan for comment on the age issue reporters. Coelho said. "The age issue is in the and his debate performance, and Mr. The questions led the Reagan cam- campaign now and people like me can Reagan responded by saying that Mr. paign yesterday to release details of talk about it, even if Mondale can't." Mondale appeared younger because he last spring's medical report that found On the CBS News broadcast Monday had been wearing more make-up. Mr. Reagan to be in good health. One of night, Bob Schieffer, a correspondent According to James M. Perry, one of the President's physicians said yester- who was on the Mondale plane that the reporters who wrote the Journal's day, "Mr. Reagan is a mentally alert, morning, described the Mondale staff article, the issue was important before robust man who appears younger than as "tap dancing down the aisles" be- the debate. his stated age." cause of the President's performance Mr. Perry said that the article had The President's performance in the in the debate and mentioned that Mr. been prepared for the most part before debate, which even his aides described Coelho was discussing the age issue at the debate. He said that he had been as- as "tentative," seems to have been the length with reporters. signed the piece about two months ago catalyst for the emergence of the issue. The Journal's lengthy article on the as part of the Journal's package of But an article in the Tuesday issue of President's health and age and Mr. campaign coverage, but that it was 10/9/84 The Wall Street Journal, as well as the Broder's column appeared the next only in the last two weeks that they had aggressive efforts of some Democratic morning. worked on it. He added that the begin- officeholders and members of the On Tuesday morning, Mr. O'Neill, ning of the article had been rewritten to Democratic campaign staff, also seem who is 15 months younger than Mr. reflect the controversy created by the to have played a large role. Reagan, said that age had become a President's debate performance. factor in the campaign. Mr. O'Neill has The story was not originally assigned Importance of Journal Article said he will retire following his next because of any specific incident, Mr. "The Journal article was an impor- term if he is re-elected. Perry said, but because Mr. Reagan is tant element in making the age ele- On Tuesday evening, all three net- the oldest President. He described the ment an issue," said John Chancellor, works addressed the age issue on their convergence of the story's preparation senior commentator for NBC News, evening news broadcasts. CBS and and the President's debate perform- but House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill ABC treated the President's fitness in ance as "propitious." Jr., Representative Tony Coelho of California and other Democrats "were already starting to push it before the Journal article appeared." The Journal devoted its main article Tuesday to what it termed the "fitness issue." The headline said, "Reagan Debate Performance Invites Open Speculation on His Ability to Serve." The article examined the available information regarding the President's health and included a comment from a specialist in aging as saying it was im- portant to keep an eye out for signs of senility in a man of Mr. Reagan's age. In his column on the Op-Ed Page of The Washington Post the same day, David S. Broder said the President's performance in the debate would "let the age issue emerge as it had not done in any of his previous campaigns," and he referred to the difference in appear- ance between Mr. Reagan and Mr. Mondale as a "startling contrast." Initial Link Is Not Made After, Following the Sunday debate, virtually all news organizations de- voted time to a review of the perform- ances of both the President and Mr. Mondale, but the focus had been on who had won and why. While the Presi- dent's aides acknowledged that his per- formance had been tentative, the link had generally not been made publicly I between the performance and the polit- ically volatile issue of the President's WALL ST.J. : 10-11-84 President's Age and Debate Performance Dominate Campaign to Reagan's Dismay M400 By JANE MAYER and ELLEN HUME mental health. But yesterday his personal Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL physician, Dr. Daniel Ruge, pronounced the WARREN, Mich. Last Sunday's debate president in "excellent health" and said and the issue of Ronald Reagan's age con- there was "no need for a mental test, his tinue to dominate the presidential cam- mental health is good.' Dr. Ruge conceded, paign, to the dismay of President Reagan however, that by the end of the debate "I and his supporters and the delight of Walter think he (Mr. Reagan) was tired. Every- Mondale and the Democrats. body was tired." The White House, nettled by suggestions Issue of Makeup that the 73-year-old president seemed falter- ing and unsure during the Louisville, Ky., Mr. Reagan himself said of the debate, debate, made public a doctor's report on his "I wasn't tired. And in regard to the age is- health. sue and everything, if I had as much makeup on as he (Mr. Mondale) did, I'd The two-page report was a more detailed have looked younger too." version of one the White House issued last May 18, describing the president as "a men- Mr. Mondale, who is 56, pounced on Mr. tally alert, robust man who appears younger Reagan's remark. At a rally in Pittsburgh's than his stated age." It said he suffers some Market Square, he told a crowd estimated at loss of hearing in his right ear and a con- 8,000 that "This morning the president said tracting tendon in his left hand, and men- the problem in the debate was makeup. tioned a benign polyp in his colon. That's the same answer Nixon gave when he debated Kennedy." Mr. Mondale added, The report didn't address the president's "This is a brand new race. From now on, everything is wide open." Mondale aides studiously avoid talking about the age issue, preferring to let the me- dia pursue it. While clearly delighted that the issue has arisen, they say Mr. Mondale has instructed them not to discuss it, even off the record, for fear of appearing ungra- cious. Mr. Reagan tried to score political points yesterday by exploiting what Mr. Mondale says was a slip of the tongue during the debate. Speaking at Macomb Community College here, the president accused Mr. Mondale of planning not one but two major tax increases by favoring the "repeal" of tax indexing. "On Sunday night," Mr. Reagan said, "my opponent admitted that once his first huge tax hike was approved. he would go for still more tax increases. Let me quote him. He said, 'As soon as we get the economy on sound ground as well, I would like to see the total repeal of indexing.' Mr. Mondale said yesterday, "I did not speak accurately" when he mentioned re- peal. "I did not use the right words." Under the 1981 tax law, indexing to account for in- flation is to go into effect next Jan. 1. Mr. Mondale has proposed limiting indexing for families with annual incomes of more than $25,000. Mondale Gains Polls continue to show Mr. Mondale gain- ing strength after the debate. CBS-TV re- ported last night that Mr. Mondale had picked up six points since the debate, al- though he remains 20 points behind the pres- ident. Mr. Mondale also met yesterday in New York with Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres. At a news conference afterward, Mr. Peres said the former vice president is "an old and good friend" and Mr. Mondale charged that the Reagan administration's Middle East policies have made "no pro- gress at all." L.A. TIMES 10-11-84 Reagan Called 'Alert' in May 18 Medical Report White House Releases failed to employ during the nation- Details of Examination Mondale on the foreign policy and ally televised debate witnessed by MYDD defense issues that will dominate an estimated two-thirds of the the candidates' second debate Oct. American electorate. By GEORGE SKELTON, Times Staff Writer A130 21. And, to substantiate the Presi- But a new campaign issue stem- dent's charges, he read to reporters ming from the debate-Reagan's WARREN, Mich,-Striving to a long list of votes against military age and its potential effect on his keep President Reagan's age from spending that the Democratic nom- stamina during a second term- becoming a major campaign issue, inee cast during the 12 years he continued to dog him. The Presi- White House officials Wednesday served in the Senate. dent accused his Democratic critics released a medical report quoting Reagan, during a brief press of a "kind of desperate reaching for an examining physician as saying conference conducted as he left the something" in questioning whether that the 73-year-old President is White House Wednesday morning, he is too old for the job. "mentally alert" and "robust." told reporters that, "when Presi- Despite what he and his aides The report disclosed nothing dent Carter in his last two years have acknowledged to be a disap- substantially new about Reagan's felt that he should start redressing pointing performance during the health and was based on a physical the military imbalance, (Vice Pres- debate-his answers often were examination conducted last May 18 ident) Mondale advised against it." hesitant and sometimes he seemed at Bethesda Naval Medical Center. And, in his address to the to lose his train of thought-Rea- But the the sudden release of the Ukrainian community, Reagan gan insisted to reporters: "I wasn't report is politically significant be- said, "If my opponent had had his tired." cause it comes at a time when way, there would never have been He added: "If had as much Democratic critics are questioning a (space) shuttle program. He led makeup on as he (Mondale) did, I'd whether the President, based on have looked younger too. I the fight against starting the shut- his debate performance with Wal- tle program. He would have spent never did wear it. I didn't wear it ter F. Mondale Sunday night, is too the money beefing up the bureau- when I was in pictures." old to serve a second term. cracy in Washington, D.C." Used Makeup for TV 'Appears Younger' Repeal of Indexing' (Reagan did use makeup on According to the medical report television, according to veteran The President also asserted in an released by the White House, the makeup artist Howard Smit, who address to community college stu- physician who supervised the ex- worked with him on programs dents here that his opponent dis- amination, Capt. W.W. Karney, including "General Electric The- closed during their debate that he stated that "Mr. Reagan is a men- ater." Smit said it was basically an has a "two-part tax plan: raise tally alert, robust man who appears issue of "balance" before the bright taxes and raise 'em again." younger than his stated age" and is Reagan was referring to Mon- lights of television. in good physical health. dale's comment that he favored Frank Westmore, the head of the A brief summary of the report "total repeal of indexing" of the makeup department for Warner had been released when Reagan income tax once the nation's econ- Bros. during Reagan's years as a underwent the examination. But omy is sound. But Mondale told contract player for the studio, died what the White House described as reporters Wednesday in New York in 1970, but his brother, Percy, one complete details were made public that he had misstated his position of seven makeup artists in the Wednesday after journalists trav- during the debate and meant to say Westmore family, said that he eling with the President requested that he is in favor of full implemen- worked with Reagan and Ginger the information. tation of indexing once the federal Rogers on the 1951 film "Storm Meanwhile, Reagan returned to deficit is under control. Warning" and that Reagan did not the political offensive for the first White House spokesman Larry wear makeup then. Like many time in several days, charging in a Speakes said: "There's a long way male stars of the era, he said, speech at a Ukrainian cultural between repeal and implementa- Reagan would "sit out in the sun center here that Mondale "has tion. Mondale ought to know the and work on his tan" during pro- made a career out of weakening difference." duction to avoid the need for America's armed forces." Indexing, which prevents tax- artificial skin toning.) Campaign spokesman James H. payers from being bumped into The President's version of how Lake said Reagan's strategists higher brackets merely because he felt Sunday night during the have decided to begin attacking they receive cost-of-living wage 100-minute debate was contradict- increases, is scheduled to take ed later by his personal physician, effect Jan. 1. Under Mondale's tax Dr. Daniel Ruge, who travels with increase plan, indexing would be him constantly. "I think he was reduced for taxpayers earning tired. Everybody was tired," Ruge $30,000 to $60,000 and postponed told reporters. for those earning more than Ruge, however, said Reagan's $60,000. health is "excellent." And, when Reagan hammered Mondale on journalists asked whether he would the defense and tax issues at three authorize release of the President's Michigan campaign stops, using full medical report, the physician hard-hitting language that he agreed. N.Y. TIMES 10-11-84 Text of a Medical Statement From Physician to President Special to The New York Times A130 WARREN, Mich., Oct. 10 - Following is the text of a statement issued to- day by Dr. Daniel Ruge, physician to President Reagan, on a medical report of May 18: The President's physical examina- EKG was unchanged from prior tion was done at the Naval Medical tracings and without abnormalities. Center, National Region, on May 18, The following laboratory studies 1984. During the prior two weeks were either negative or normal at the some laboratory studies were done, levels noted: and the results are included in this re- Alkaline phosphatase 61 port. Total protein 6.5 Capt. W.W. Karney, who super- Albumin 4.4 vised the examination and did a por- Globulin 2.1 tion of the examination, stated that, Cholesterol 219 "Mr. Reagan is a mentally alert, ro- Calcium 8.7 bust man who appears younger than Potassium 4.1 his stated age." Auditory acuity of LDH 168 the right ear was diminished. There SGOT 19 was contraction of one of the flexor SGPT 14 tendons of the left hand (Dupuy- Uric acid 6.0 trens). The remainder of the general Total bilirubin 0.9 physical examination was normal. Creatinine 1.0 Ophthalmological examination Phosphorous 3.3 confirms the myopia for which he Blood urea nitrogen 14 wears contact lenses. Chloride 105 An extensive urologic examination Carbon dioxide 22.2 done on April 1, 1982, was within nor- Sodium 142 mal range. A limited examination Red blood count 5.01 million performed on May 18, 1984, con- Hemoglobin 15 firmed the previous studies. Hematocrit 45.6 Sigmoidoscopic examination re- Platelets 277,000 vealed diverticula noted in a prior White blood count 8,200 physical exam and a four-millimeter Bands 1 polyp. The final diagnosis on the Segmented neutrophils 64 polyp was inflammatory fibroid Lymphocytes 30 polyp, which requires no further Eosinophil 1 treatment. Monocytes 4 Three successive hemo-occult stud- Urinalysis - Negative for glucose, ies of feces were negative for occult al- blood. bumin and blood. Three successive urine cytology Mean corpuscular volume 91.1 specimens were negative for malig- Mean corpuscular hemoglobin 30.0 nant cells. Mean corpuscular hemoglobin con- Chest X-rays revealed old pleural centration 32.9 scarring with evidence of resolution The blood pressure was 140/80 and since a previous study dated Oct. 29, the pulse 72. 1981. This is a residual of the event of His only medicines are multiple March 30, 1981, and indicates contin- vitamins, weekly hyposensitization ued healing. allergy shots and yearly flu vaccine. Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 2 3RD STORY of Level 1 printed in FULL format. Copyright (c) 1980 The New York Times Company; The New York Times July 6, 1980, Sunday, Late City Final Edition SECTION: Section 7; Page 11, Column 1; Book Review Desk LENGTH: 878 words HEADLINE: THE TROUBLE WITH PRESIDENTS BODY: Lawrence K. Altman, M.D. is a science correspondent for The New York Times. PRESIDENTIAL COURAGE By John B. Moses, M.D. and Wilbur Cross. 249 PP. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. $11.95. By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN American Presidents are often thought of as an unusually healthy lot because of the rigors endured in their job. But the thesis of ''Presidential Courage' by John B. Moses, M.D. and Wilbur Cross is that the 38 individuals who became our leaders have had more disease, dementia and disability than almost any other known professional group, and that their one enduring shared quality was courage in overcoming their handicaps. This book is not the first on the health of the Presidents and should not be the last. AS a Presidential election unfolds, voters should be as concerned about the candidates' medical status as about other factors, since the accidents of health and those of history have a great deal in common. The authors do provide fascinating accounts of how Grover Cleveland's jaw cancer was secretly removed on a ship in the East River; of how Woodrow Wilson, paralyzed from a stroke, could barely sign official papers; of how Franklin Pierce suffered from cirrhosis of the liver. Unfortunately, on other counts, this book disappoints. A major contention is that American Presidents ''rarely turned to the outstanding medical men of their day for treatment and counsel. This seems true of a few Presidents. But the authors repeatedly contradict their point by describing many Presidential doctors and consultants as prominent, noted, top, outstanding, foremost specialists and pioneers in their fields. The authors contend that Presidents suffered ''unique'' diseases, particularly from the demands of office. Sustained stress can take its toll on any person. But the illnesses described are heart attacks, cancer, alcoholism, cirrhosis of the liver, depression and nervous breakdowns - common problems in any doctor's practice. The authors also argue that a conspiracy among historians has suppressed all but the vaguest information about the health and disabilities of those who have held the nation's highest office. Yet diagnosing illnesses from historical accounts is extraordinarily difficult because it must be based on clues, not on direct examinations and details from medical and autopsy reports. It is also sobering to realize how ailments that are considered relatively minor today were devastating only a few decades ago. In a few cases, the authors do give a good LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 3 (c) 1980 The New York Times, July 6, 1980 description of what was once standard medical practice, such as the succession of 'eminent and respected physicians'' who poked their unwashed fingers into the bullet wound in President Garfield's lower chest. In other cases, perspective is lacking, and the level of analysis is sometimes superficial. For example, the authors attribute Mary Lincoln's violent eruptions, personality changes and mental illness to the late stages of syphilis, without mentioning if President Lincoln suffered from this contagious disease. The omission is important because a heart condition called aortic insufficiency can be a devastating, life-threatening complication of syphilis. The authors cite a report concluding that Mr. Lincoln had aortic insufficiency due to a genetic disease called Marfan's syndrome, which they contend would have made Mr. Lincoln a hopeless invalid in office had his term not been cut short by a bullet. Perhaps 50. But they do not consider whether Mr. Lincoln's heart condition could have been due to syphilis as well as to Marfan's syndrome. In some places, the writing and editing are sloppy. The authors mention that President Nixon suffered from phlebitis when he went to China in 1972. Actually, he suffered from that leg ailment not in 1972, but during his visits to Egypt and Russia in 1974. His hospitalization and surgery for complications of phlebitis came shortly after his resignation. Finally, the authors do not discuss the most important questions regarding Presidential health. A constitutional amendment now specifies the order of succession, yet the issue of when a President should relinquish power in a time of disability or medical crisis is far from resolved. An urgent need exists to discuss the complexities of the problem of disability and the health of the Presidents. A further question is whether someone should be disqualified from becoming President just because of a chronic illness. How much detail about such a condition should the public be given? And by whom? The President's personal doctor? An independent panel? Should a doctor break confidentiality to tell the public that a President is lying about his health? Many more such questions need public discussion. Unfortunately, the authors did not attempt to enlighten us about the answers. TYPE: review LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 4 1ST STORY of Level 1 printed in FULL format. Copyright (c) 1980 The New York Times Company; The New York Times July 20, 1980, Sunday, Late City Final Edition SECTION: Section 11; Westchester; Page 17, Column 1; Weschester Weekly Desk LENGTH: 927 words HEADLINE: AN AUTHOR-PHYSICIAN EXAMINES PRESIDENTS' INFIRMITIES BODY: Andrew Jackson By RUTH GERCHICK ACCORDING to John B. Moses, a Scarsdale internist, when someone becomes President, ''he's owned by the public; the public should know what they've bought. Dr. Moses, is the co-author, along with Wilbur Cross, of 'Presidential Courage,' a book recently published by W. W. Norton & Company that deals with the health of Presidents, their medical treatment and how they were able to function despite their infirmities. George Washington, Dr. Moses said in a interview, ''was a hypochondriac. Jefferson went into a blue funk when his wife died, and rode around crying; Madison had hysterical epilepsy. Lincoln was manic-depressive, and Harding got carried off to a sanitarium for upset nerves. Others suffered from physical illnesses, Dr. Moses said. He cited Andrew Jackson, for example, who had chronic dysentery, smallpox, chronic urticaria (body itching), osteomyelitis (bone infection) and blindness in one eye, among other ailments. ' 'Some of our best Presidents,' he said, ''might never have become chief executives if people had known they were so sick. The amazing thing is that they managed to run the country as well as they did. Nevertheless, it seems to me a man should not be allowed to carry that responsibility if he has a brain tumor or is suffering from such terrible coronary artery disease that he can't pass a stress test or a psychiatric test designed to identify severe disturbances. I'm not talking about peculiarities or neuroses. Dr. Moses's interest in Presidents has been virtually lifelong. ''As a boy, I had always admired Washington and Lincoln, he said. ''I was brought up to think they were the greatest; I even used to keep scrapbooks on them. But it wasn't until one summer vacation in New Hampshire, when my wife began to collect political buttons as a hobby, that our conversations became centered on former Presidents and Vice Presidents. We spent a lot of time reading and talking about Presidential families, and as a physician, naturally, I began to think about their health.' Shortly afterward, Dr. Moses said, he was asked to prepare a medical paper for White Plains Hospital, the subject of which was Andrew Jackson's health. When a program on hypertension pre-empted his talk, he delivered the lecture LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 5 (c) 1980 The New York Times, July 20, 1980 anyway, at a cocktail party arranged by his wife for friends and colleagues. In 1972, when the Democratic Vice Presidential candidate, Senator Thomas F. Eagleton, was eliminated from the ticket after disclosing his history of recurrent depression, Dr. Moses decided to broaden the scope of his research. 'II had read enough by then to realize that a great many of our Presidents suffered from emotional illness, he said. 'Eagleton's problems were minuscule compared with those of Lincoln, Jefferson and Madison. I began studying Rutherford Hayes, who became President despite an extremely difficult childhood, which included an abnormally intense emotional tie with his sister. Then I came across a tremendous amount of medical information on Presidents who had been assassinated. ''From reading, he continued, ''I found that many Presidents in the past had had poor medical care, mostly because their doctors were not the best available but old pals, usually, from the military. Both Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt chose as physicians casual acquaintainces who they remembered as good conversationalists. Some of the things these doctors did were outlandish even according to the knowledge of their time. But then overwhelming personalities, like Presidents, just don't take to standard-type doctors. Should the public be informed of the health of Presidents? "Many physicians say not unless the patient gives permission, Dr. Moses replied. ''Even if you discover a tumor, you have no right to say anything about it publicly because of the confidentiality between doctor and patient. This is a very difficult problem. I'm not sure I agree with them when disclosure involves political figures. As for whether candidates for the top two posts in the country should be required to make disclosures on their health, Dr. Moses said, ''I really don't know the answer. think some programs should be set up, he suggested, 'whereby the candidate's physician would send the candidate to a clinic like Mayo or Leahy, for a complete checkup, including CAT Scans of his brain and pancreas, echo-cardiograms, stress tests and blood tests galore. Today, some tests reveal diseases that will kill a person in a year. "When the findings are in,'' he added, ''the candidate and his doctor should decide what they will tell the electorate. Between the two of them, they got to solve it somehow. The internist, who was born in New Rochelle and has lived and worked in Scarsdale for 27 years, said he has just begun to explore the field of Presidential medical history. There are Presidents we haven't covered in this book, he said, ' 'and First Ladies, who were just as interesting, or more so. And then there are the Vice Presidents and the guys who didn't make it, like Henry Clay and Robert Taft. What I'd like to do in the future is have my publisher give me a huge advance. Then I could take a couple of months off and just go digging around. GRAPHIC: Illustrations: Photos of Thomas Jefferson, Rutherford B. Hayes, James Madison and LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEWIS U.S. News & World Report VOLUME LIX-No. 16 WASHINGTON, D.C. -USN&WR Photo A grave President pauses in the busy week before his surgery A PRESIDENT'S HEALTH Its Meaning to the Nation When President Johnson went under the surgeon's knife, Vice President Hum- phrey stood ready: In this nuclear age, the nation cannot risk a leadership gap while a President is disabled. Then came the doctors' report: Operation a success. A President's health in today's dangerous world takes on The operation, however, went well. Surgeons pronounced the highest importance to the nation. it a "complete success." In an early-morning operation that Only the President holds power to make basic decisions lasted two hours and 15 minutes, surgeons removed the in time of war operations, such as those in Vietnam. A Pres- President's gall bladder, which was found to contain a gall- ident alone is empowered to act in a nuclear attack. stone. They also removed a kidney stone in one ureter. The nation's security demands that there be no time gap By midday, the President was reported once again able in the exercise of presidential powers. to "make decisions." In the meantime, no need for any When President Lyndon B. Johnson underwent a gall- presidential decisions had arisen. Another crisis-for the bladder operation on October 8, Vice President Hubert nation and for Mr. Johnson-appeared safely past. Humphrey stood by, ready to take over the presidential Lyndon Johnson has had a series of health problems, ex- powers at once, if necessary. tending back 28 years to 1937. On September 7, he en- By mutual agreement between himself and the President, countered a new kind of health problem. While at his Texas Mr. Humphrey was to step in as temporary acting President ranch for the Labor Day week-end, he suffered abdominal if the operation should leave Mr. Johnson unable, for any pains. X rays and other examinations showed the presence considerable period, to perform effectively as President. (continued on next page) U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, Oct. 18, 1965 33 U.S. News & World Report WHEN PRESIDENTS [continued from preceding page] approaching death, in 1945 when he HAVE BEEN DISABLED- N took part in fateful decisions at the Yalta of a gallstone and a poorly functioning Conference that affected the shape of Twice in its history, this gall bladder. It was decided by the Presi- the postwar world. Mr. Roosevelt's ill health is believed to have contributed country has been leaderless dent's doctors that he should undergo to the victories that Russia's Joseph for long periods because its ch an operation. President was disabled. One examining physician was quoted Stalin won in that conference. Woodrow Wilson was an invalid, his In 1881, on July 2, Presi- as saying the operation could be de- dent James A. Garfield was scribed as "preventive maintenance." brain damaged by a stroke for a 17- shot. For 80 days he lay dis- So The idea was to prevent the movement month period from 1919 to 1921, during abled until his death on Sep- of the gallstones into a more dangerous which this country refused to join the tember 19. area, or a rupture of the gall-bladder League of Nations he had fostered. President James Garfield, after being In 1919, on September 25, an lining. President Woodrow Wilson On October 5, the President himself shot in 1881, was incapacitated for 80 suffered a stroke. He was un- made the announcement that he would days before dying. able to perform his presiden- pr submit to the operation. In those times, before the era of nu- tial duties much of the time Pe Then, as though to show that he was clear weapons and the threat of almost for 17 months that remained still vigorous, the President set out on a instant destruction, not so much hinged of his term, which ended two-day whirlwind of activity. upon having a President in full control of his faculties at all times. The absence March 4, 1921. Mr. Johnson signed some bills and Several Presidents have in proclamations. He made two speeches. of effective capacity for decision making been incapacitated for short He received various delegations. He re- was not felt so acutely. periods. viewed the foreign situation with his A question of survival. The intricate Abraham Lincoln, shot on top advisers. He took newspapermen on machinery of Government in the U.S. April 14, 1865, was uncon- a brisk walk around the White House today-when survival of the nation may scious until his death the fol- grounds and into the White House. He depend on instant decision-presents a lowing day. ou dropped in unexpectedly on a luncheon far different problem. In 1893, Grover Cleveland at the National Press Club. This fact came to be recognized dur- was smuggled aboard a yacht Late on October 7, the President en- ing the Administration of President in New York Harbor for a tered the National Naval Medical Center Dwight D. Eisenhower. He considered cancer operation on his palate in Bethesda, Md., just outside Washing- resigning after a 1955 heart attack that that was kept a secret for 25 ton, D. C. Early on October 8, the opera- put him out of action for months. After years. tion was performed. that, he had an ileitis operation in 1956 William McKinley was shot For the President, his gall-bladder at- and a stroke in 1957. on Sept. 6, 1901, and died tack was the first trouble of that type. It was not until early 1958 that an eight days later. But he had suffered many other types of understanding was reached between Warren G. Harding lin- illnesses, as listed in the chart on President Eisenhower and Vice President gered several days after a P1 page 35. Richard Nixon that the Vice Presi- heart attack before dying on to Mr. Johnson has had recurrent attacks dent would step in as acting President in Aug. 2, 1923. of kidney stones. Most were removed by case the President were incapacitated Dwight D. Eisenhower suf- an manipulation. However, major surgery again. fered three major illnesses was required in 1955, followed by six The late President John Kennedy had 0 during his two terms in the weeks of convalescence. a similar arrangement with his Vice White House: a heart attack Later in 1955 came Mr. Johnson's most President, Lyndon Johnson. And Mr. P on Sept. 24, 1955; an opera- severe illness-a heart attack which Johnson, when he succeeded to the Pres- tion for ileitis in June, 1956; threatened his life. He spent six months idency, made the same kind of agree- and a stroke on Nov. 25, in recuperating from that. ment with Vice President Humphrey. 1957. Doctors say there has been a complete Under this agreement, as described During all the presidential recovery from the heart attack. on page 37, Mr. Humphrey takes over as disabilities of the past, presi- Since becoming President in 1963, acting President at any time when the dential work simply went un- Mr. Johnson has had some wartlike President is unable to act. done. is growths removed from his skin. In Jan- Congress now has proposed a perma- In the past, there was no b uary, 1965, after exposure to bad weath- nent solution to the problem of presiden- arrangement, as there is now, b er at his inauguration, he was hospital- tial disability in the form of a constitu- for the Vice President to take ized for three days with a severe cold tional amendment, the terms of which over temporarily. is accompanied by a heavy cough. are set out on page 37. Mr. Eisenhower was the Illness of a President, no matter how However, it is expected to be 1967 first President to have such o mild, creates tremors of concern and before this proposed amendment is rati- an arrangement. He put it in gives rise to questions about what would fied by 38 States as required before it writing that Vice President th happen if he were incapacitated for any can become the law of the land. Richard M. Nixon was to be considerable period-or should die. In the meantime, it is the personal "acting President" in case of ca A look at history. Several U.S. agreement between Mr. Johnson and Mr. a disability emergency. But d Presidents in the past have lain incapac- Humphrey which assures the country of that arrangement was not itated by illness or gunshot wounds for continuing presidential leadership. made until 1958-after all the long periods, as related on this page. The latest illness struck Mr. Johnson major illnesses of Mr. Eisen- Some presidential illnesses have OC- in the first year of his first term as an hower's White House years curred at critical periods in the nation's elected President. He became 57 years were past. history. old last August. He will be 61 when his Franklin Roosevelt was a sick man, (continued on page 36) U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, Oct. 18, 1965 NE 34 MEDICAL HISTORY OF 1955: Kidney stone removed by August 8 until Congress convened surgery at Mayo Clinic, Rochester, the following January. LYNDON JOHNSON Minn. Six weeks of convalescence. 1955-62: Bronchial illnesses, with Suffered a severe heart attack-cor- heavy colds. Childhood: The usual diseases of onary thrombosis. Serious fears for 1963: Kidney stone. Treatment childhood. his life; given only 50-50 chance to with medication. 1937: Appendectomy. survive. In hospital five weeks, then 1964: Skin ailment described as 1942-43: Bronchiectasis, contract- recuperated at Texas ranch from hyperkeratosis, necessitating removal ed while serving as a naval officer in of two wartlike growths from Mr. South Pacific. The disease, first no- Johnson's hand. Over a period of 20 ticed during high-altitude flights, years, he has had nearly a dozen made him susceptible to heavy colds small growths removed from various and pneumonia. parts of the body. All these growths Slight fungus infection. have been benign. Stricken with near-fatal case of 1965: The current year's record: pneumonia in New Guinea, taken to January 23-severe cold with heavy Pearl Harbor for treatment. cough, for which Mr. Johnson was 1943-48: Heavy colds, some of taken by ambulance to Naval Med- them approaching pneumonia. ical Center at Bethesda, Md. Hos- 1948: Went to hospital for clear- pitalized 3½ days. ing of bronchial tubes. September 7 - Bothered with Kidney stone was removed by stomach pains while at Texas ranch. manipulation. Gall-bladder trouble was suspected. 1948-55: Number of bronchial ill- -UPI Photo October 8-Operated on for re- nesses and heavy colds. Ten years ago, Mr. and Mrs. John- moval of gall bladder at Naval Med- Small kidney stones passed with- son posed at the hospital as he be- ical Center, Bethesda, Md. A kidney out difficulty. gan recovery from a heart attack stone also was removed. WHAT DOCTORS SAY ABOUT GALL-BLADDER SURGERY A gall-bladder operation, such as bladder trouble is gallstones-solid President Johnson underwent on Oc- particles that block the normal tober 8, is classed as "major" sur- flow of bile. President Johnson was gery, yet doctors generally class it found to have a gallstone. In addi- among the less hazardous abdominal GALL tion, a kidney stone was found in operations. the right ureter, and this stone was The fatality rate is less than one BLADDER LIVER removed. patient in every 400 in top medical Medical scientists are not agreed centers. on just how gallstones are formed. The operation consists of remov- STOMACH They know, however, that as people ing the gall bladder. eat richer foods and exercise less, This is a bluish, pear-shaped or- gallstones and gall-bladder trouble gan, about 2 to 4 inches long and a become more common. It is esti- little over 2 inches wide at its wid- BILE ENTRY mated that approximately 10 per est part. It lies under the liver and is partially attached to it. The gall TO cent of all men and 25 per cent of all women in the U.S. develop gall- bladder is on the right side of the INTESTINES COMMON BILI DUCT stones before the age of 60. body just below the rib cage. Gallstones are not necessarily dan- It acts as a reservoir for a green- gerous, but they can cause great ish, watery fluid called bile, releas- Area of surgery on the President pain. They can lead to serious infec- ing this fluid to aid in the digestion involved gall bladder and bile duct tion, to jaundice, possibly to cancer. of fats. Most doctors recommend surgery as Bile is formed in the liver. When soon as stones are detected. the gall bladder is removed, as in to the intestines. When the gall For a while after surgery, there is the President's case, the liver itself bladder is gone, this duct increases some pain in the wound area. can normally supply enough bile to sufficiently in size to take over the Usually there is no need for spe- do the job of digesting fats without reservoir function formerly per- cial care after the patient leaves the the reservoir previously provided by formed by the gall bladder. The en- hospital. But physicians advise stick- the gall bladder. largement process usually takes ing to a "gall-bladder diet"-one It does this through the common three to four months. that is low in fats-for at least a bile duct, which leads from the liver The commonest cause of gall- year after the operation. 965 U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, Oct. 18, 1965 35 U.S. News & World Report U.S. A PRESIDENT'S Press Secretary reported that the Presi- -that a slowdown would be advisable, dent was down to 202 pounds as of Oc- HEALTH from the standpoint of the President's dent. tober 5. health. a clos The President tends to be a driver at Long-time observers of the Washing- lem t. his work, not inclined to spare himself. ton scene have learned to be wary of For [continued from page 34] He keeps irregular hours, sometimes medical reports and forecasts related to a repu works far into the night. Presidents. Presio first full term ends. Under the Constitu- People with long experience in Wash- Medical reports on Woodrow Wilson, troub tion he is eligible for re-election to serve ington doubt that any other President after his stroke, tended to be optimistic, he ha until 1973, when he will be 65. worked harder at what many regard as hiding the seriousness of his condition. fough The President is a big man-6 feet 3 an impossible job for any one man. Reporters saw Franklin Roosevelt fad- sectio inches tall, with a large, heavy frame. Aides' advice: slow down. Mr. John- in be ing before their eyes, only to be reas- His tendency is to be a big eater, with son insists that he thrives on hard work. sured by White House doctors. smoot a fondness for fattening foods and dishes Up until his latest illness, doctors had on the Today, with the nation's security pos- that are highly seasoned. pronounced him in good health. But sibly at stake, Americans are keeping an Frie After suffering pain on September 7, there long has been a feeling among dent extremely close eye on the health of their he went on a diet and lost weight. His White House aides-and Johnson friends side O President. tegrat oppor issues gent Mr ever, WHEN ATTENTION TURNS books He 1 Housi TO THE VICE PRESIDENT- means "Grea At that Opinions about Hubert Humphrey usually are strong, never spend muted. Ever since he became Vice President, speculation about the ning rights kind of leader he would be has been important. Once, many busi- more nessmen considered him a strident "liberal." Has he changed? How future Th -USN&WR Photo much? Here's a close-up of the Government's No. 2 man. the ti big p said Whenever a President's health comes to the White House, he would carry for- omy. He and President Johnson have land into question, the Vice President's name ward socialist-type programs further and been somewhat alike in this regard. Fo instantly enters the public mind. faster than would Lyndon Johnson. At the same time, Mr. Humphrey Presio Hubert H. Humphrey, as Vice Presi- Even before the 1964 election, Mr. has not turned his back on his labor ers lo dent, was the object of that kind of in- Humphrey set out to convince business friends. He shows no signs of lagging in give terest and conjecture when President leaders that he was not the radical they his enthusiasm for prolabor legislation, world Johnson faced an operation. People won- imagined. He stressed much the same and in the future is expected to be bat- Fo dered what kind of leader the Vice Pres- concern that President Johnson voiced tling for an increase in the minimum eign ident would be if decisions at the top over the need for a profitable and ex- wage. In any showdown between busi- been level were forced upon him. panding system of private enterprise. ness and labor, insiders believe, he would the In his 10 months in office, Mr. Hum- P Bid for new image. As Vice Presi- choose to side with labor. said: phrey has been busy seeking to over- dent, he has traveled around, speaking The Vice President built his political stick come an impression once widely held to business and scholastic groups, seeking base in Minnesota with farmer-labor sup- among businessmen and others that he to establish a new image. He told the port. And, say those who know him best. sellin would be a real radical in the White U.S. Chamber of Commerce: he would never dissipate one of the big doesr House. "You businessmen are more generous assets of the Democratic Party-the vot- Th How far to "left"? The Vice Presi- than any government. This is the most ing support of organized labor. ested dent, during his early days in the U.S. compassionate, most kindly, most eco- Anti-Communist record. Mr. Hum- popu Senate, came to be regarded as favoring nomically just society on the face of the phrey always has been strongly anti- policy the extremely "liberal" side of public earth." Communist. As mayor of Minneapolis, he tion? questions. He had been one of the or- Mr. Humphrey, however, always has led in the successful fight to drive Com- "H ganizers and top leaders of Americans advocated federal expansion. He has munists out of the Democratic Farmer- for Democratic Action (ADA). Most son P been on the side of big spending by Labor Party, which had elected him. to red labor leaders gave him strong support. Government. A balanced budget is not In 1954, he was the author of legisla- of the The Vice President was viewed as be- one of his preoccupations. tion in the Senate outlawing the Com- Pre ing on the "left" side of most issues- As one who struggled through the munist Party of the U.S. as the agent of hard more strongly prolabor than Lyndon Great Depression and who knew the ruin a hostile foreign power. This did not He h Johnson, an advocate of even bigger that struck the farms and small business please many of his "liberal" friends. walls spending and bigger Government, a cru- enterprises in rural areas in that period, In the Vice Presidency, Mr. Hum- at nig sading "liberal" on racial problems. Mr. Humphrey has favored strong fed- phrey, more than anyone before him, has work The feeling was that, if he went on eral programs to assure a growing econ- been trained to be a "standby" Presi- says. 36 U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, Oct. 18, 1965 U.S. News & World Report A PRESIDENT'S HEALTH-HOW MUCH SHOULD THE PUBLIC KNOW? had not picked up the mouth droop, the unsteady walk, the slurred speech. Once again, there is speculation about the health of an "Lord Moran had done what many physicians to the illus- American President. trious had done, waited until the deaths of their patients Every bit of information from the White House-official and then divulged information not revealed as an essential and unofficial-is that Lyndon B. Johnson is in the best of part of securing treatment and not discrediting the dead. health for a man of his age. The President himself tells vis- itors he feels fine. Those "Vice Adm. Ross T. McIntire, Franklin Roosevelt's physi- cian, in collaboration with George Creel wrote 'White House close to him say he looks Physician' in 1946. Like Lord Moran, he describes his travels and acts like a man in ex- with Roosevelt and the political events he witnessed, as well cellent physical condition. as his patient's medical condition. McIntire found the Presi- Yet, many are im- dent generally sound for a man of his age, and he states his pressed by the fact that death from a cerebral hemorrhage could not have been pre- he looks older when they dicted. On the other hand, Irwin Richman, of the William see him on television. He Penn Museum, writing in a recent issue of 'Pennsylvania has obviously lost weight. Medicine,' states: Sometimes, in speeches, " "The public was uninformed about the President's series his voice sounds weary. of "little strokes," arteriosclerosis and a series of respiratory All of this raises once inflammations ranging from colds to severe bronchitis.' more the question about The President on television how much information the "In the case of Wilson, his physician, Dr. Grayson, co- public does have-or should have-on the health of its top of- operated with Mrs. Wilson to keep information about the ficials. The following are excerpts from an article in the President's stroke from the nation. Oct. 30, 1967, issue of "The Journal of the American Medi- "In the case of Harding, the story of his sudden death cal Association." Dr. Jonas B. Robitscher, the author, is a still remains mysterious. In Kennedy's case, the full details practicing physician who also holds a law degree. of his adrenocortical deficit, the medications he was receiv- ing, as well as the extent of his orthopedic problem, were kept from the public "It is a characteristic of the health reports which the doc- tors of Presidents reveal to the press that they tend to em- phasize normal findings and eliminate adverse material "When Lord Moran, who had been Winston Churchill's 6 Roosevelt's arteriosclerosis and Kennedy's adrenocortical sta- personal physician and constant companion from 1940 until tus and also the extent to which he was orthopedically dis- Churchill's death, published his book ['Churchill: Taken abled at the time of his death were equally soft-pedaled. From the Diaries of Lord Moran'] about his famous patient "The adrenal status is particularly significant, since the and friend, based on the diaries he had kept during this knowledge that he was suffering from a disease hitherto con- whole period, there was indeed furor sidered usually fatal, as well as the psychological effects of "Why the outcry? The book contains two types of revela- receiving cortisone, could both have been factors in the mak- tions. One is the chronicling of what Churchill did and said, ing of major presidential decisions. In addition, the reliabili- his encounters with Roosevelt and Stalin, his remarks on the ty of the health report issued during the course of the 1960 conduct of the war. campaign by the candidate's physicians can be judged only "The second type of revelation concerns Churchill's physi- on the basis of whether important information was withheld cal condition-his series of strokes, his gradual deterioration, from the public. his attempt to maintain his prestige and power in the 1950s. * * As SO often happens in the case of the physical ills of the "The principle followed by the doctors of the politically great, when Churchill had his stroke in 1953 the public was great during their lives appears to be selective release of merely informed that the Prime Minister was suffering from public information, although the public is encouraged to be- giddiness and would need a month's rest. This rest was lieve the whole truth is being bared. The physician is thus stretched out to a longer period of time. Eventually, four not only a doctor to his patient, but he also fulfills a public months after the stroke, an important public occasion could role-he gives reassurance to the public concerning the health not be delayed-Churchill journeyed to Margate to deliver of its elected officials. a major address to the Conservative Party. "I submit that under such circumstances there can be jus- "Churchill rose to the occasion; the test was passed; he re- tifiable exceptions to the principle that the patient's state of mained Prime Minister for two more years. I wonder if the health is a private rather than a public matter. Certainly British doctors who struck out at Lord Moran for his 'breach during the lifetime of the patient his doctors should not re- of confidentiality' in letting information of this kind be veal information without his consent. After his death it known, long after it had become history and when Church- would seem appropriate to set the record straight in the ill's death had made it impossible for harm to result from hopes that history's lessons can be useful in the evaluation disclosure, were not, in fact, reacting to their chagrin: they of similar situations which will inevitably arise." [END] 52 U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 22, 1968 [574] Nov. 3 Public Papers of the Presidents lakes from the growing menace of pollution. thing really be more basic to a Great Society? Like the problem of the cities, water pol- Could anything really be more vital to our lution can no longer be attacked piecemeal. children? Our attack must be comprehensive if it is I have signed many bills in the 3 years that to be total. Pollution is not a problem of I have been President. I will sign perhaps the individual cities or even the individual a thousand this year. But none has given States. It is a problem of the entire river- me greater pleasure than the ones that we sheds and water basins. And there is where are about to sign this afternoon. For they the problem must be fought. are proud additions to the legacy of a greater The new measure will allow us to do that. America. It enlarges and it strengthens the compre- I welcome each of you to the East Room hensive approach that is already begun. It this afternoon as participants at this his- creates new incentives for our States and for toric occasion. our cities. It strengthens their partnership Thank you very much. with industry and with the Federal Gov- NOTE: The President spoke at I:06 p.m. in the East ernment. It enables us to work together on Room at the White House. sound and practical plans for controlling As enacted, the Demonstration Cities and Metro- pollution once and for all. politan Development Act of 1966 is Public Law 89-754 (80 Stat. 1255), and the Clean Water Resto- Clean streets and clear rivers-could any- ration Act of 1966 is Public Law 89-753 (80 Stat. 1246). 575 The President's News Conference of November 3, 1966 THE PRESIDENT'S PLAN To UNDERGO SURGERY recommendation that the operation take place within 15 or 18 days from now. THE PRESIDENT. Good afternoon, ladies The doctors also intend at that time to and gentlemen. remove a small polyp from my throat. I wanted you to know that my doctors They have recommended that I begin a have recommended that I undergo surgery reduced schedule of activity in preparation to repair a defect at the site of the incision for the operation. I intend to leave tomor- made during the gallbladder operation a year row for Texas. ago. I would expect to put in a rather heavy About 6 months ago a small bulge began to day tomorrow on desk work and bills and appear in the region of the scar on the right leave sometime in the afternoon. side of my abdomen. Although it would Mr. Moyers 1 is here with the doctors who disappear from time to time, I experienced will take part in the operation, and who a continuing soreness and a drawing, pulling have participated in the diagnosis. sensation. The protrusion has enlarged re- They will come in and be glad to answer cently and the soreness has recurred, and the any questions you may have to ask. They doctors have therefore recommended surgery. will be Dr. Burkley; Dr. James Cain of After final discussions with Dr. Burkley Mayo's; Dr. Devine, the throat man from in Seoul, Korea, on Tuesday, I accepted his 1 Bill D. Moyers, Special Assistant to the President. 1310 Lyndon B. Johnson, 1966 Nov. 3 [575] Mayo's; and Dr. Gould, the throat specialist in the region of the scar localized where the from New York who has been treating me. drains had been removed. In April 1966 a small protrusion was noted. INTRODUCTION OF PRESIDENT'S PHYSICIANS There has been a continuing soreness and a drawing sensation in this area. The pro- MR. MOYERS. The President will go back trusion has enlarged somewhat in the last 3 to his office and I will bring the doctors in. weeks and is now approximately the size of a We will have a session with them before silver dollar. It is reducible when the anyone leaves. President is either lying down or wearing a These will all be in the material you will back brace. receive as you leave here, but Dr. James Since there has been some recent enlarge- Cain is to my far left. Dr. Cain is a long- ment of the protrusion and recurrent sore- time personal physician to the President's ness, surgical repair is therefore advisable. family. In August, a small polyp in the region Next on my left is Adm. George Burkley, of the right vocal cord of the President's Physician to the President. throat was noted. This cleared up from time On my right is Dr. W. James Gould, direc- to time. This polyp was again noted just tor of otolaryngology at the Lenox Hill prior to the Asia trip and Dr. W. J. Gould Hospital. of New York City and Dr. Kenneth Devine You will have biographical sketches of the of the Mayo Clinic recommended that it be doctors. removed. At the time the abdominal wall Dr. Hallenbeck is not here. He is the is repaired, the polyp will be removed from surgeon who performed the operation last the throat. year, and will again be the principal surgeon. There is no indication of any serious prob- Dr. Kenneth D. Devine is to my right. lem in either instance, and his general health He is a member of the section of plastic continues to be excellent. surgery of the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Hallenbeck is head of a section on QUESTIONS general surgery and head of the section of surgical research of the Mayo Clinic. Q. What is the nature of the protrusion? Dr. Burkley has a statement, a copy of DR. BURKLEY. As the word itself implies, which will also be in the material you receive it is just as you look at something, there is a as you leave here. little hump, that is what the connotation is. Q. Doctor, could you define a polyp for STATEMENT ON THE PRESIDENT'S CONDITION us? DR. GOULD. The polyp is a soft tissue DR. BURKLEY. At the time of the Presi- protrusion, that is like a grape, actually. dent's gallbladder surgery, drains were Q. Like what? placed in the abdominal wall about I inch DR. GOULD. A small grape. from the end of the incision on the right side. Q. What would cause it? This is routine procedure in such surgery. DR. GOULD. In this instance, excess voice Following removal of the drains, the usage. wound appeared to heal completely. On Q. What would be the size of the polyp, several occasions, a drawing pain was noticed sir? 1311 [575] Nov. 3 Public Papers of the Presidents DR. GOULD. Three millimeters, sub- can make an incision over it and pull the cortical. muscles together and close it. Q. That might be an explanation for Q. Is this a frequent development? hoarseness from time to time? DR. CAIN. It is a frequent development. DR. GOULD. Yes. It is reasonably frequent. You hope it won't Q. How do you characterize it-a minor happen, but it happens often enough that I surgery? think you would say it was frequent. DR. GOULD. Any surgery is a surgical Q. What do you think causes it beyond procedure and minor or major, according to that? the individual. It is a small amount of DR. BURKLEY. Well, the drainage area tissue. I will put it that way. doesn't have the same opportunity to heal as Q. Would this polyp be tested for a when the whole thing is tied tightly, and malignancy? that sometimes makes that area a little DR. GOULD. Yes. weaker and more apt to occur in that area. Q. Dr. Burkley, do you expect the surgery, Q. Do either of these two procedures that the operation, to be held in Bethesda Naval you describe present problems normally, Hospital? with the average patients? DR. BURKLEY. The decision on where the DR. BURKLEY. No, there is no particular surgery is to be performed has not been de- problem. cided, it has not been made. Q. Is it the plan that the President will Q. What is the size of the protrusion? remain at the ranch until the operation? DR. CAIN. I think that you ought to be MR. MOYERS. That hasn't been definitely sure you understand this pretty well. There decided. is a small defect at the end of the scar, as DR. BURKLEY. It is recommended that the Dr. Burkley mentioned, where the drains President have approximately 2 weeks' rest, were removed. This is about the size of the at least 2 weeks' rest before any procedures end of your finger, perhaps, the area there. are attempted. Then, out from this, there is a protrusion Q. What effect does the removal of the about the size of a silver dollar, or maybe polyp have upon the speaking after the op- a golf ball. Let me show you here. It is eration? That is, for any period of time, something kind of this way. will it be difficult to speak? Say there is a hole there, and the protru- DR. GOULD. There will be hoarseness for sion is something like that [illustrating], 2 or 3 weeks, due to local tissue swelling, and when he lies down, it goes back in. but there should be no permanent effect Q. What caused this, doctor? upon speech. DR. CAIN. Well, it is a weakness in the Q. How long would he ordinarily be hos- wall there at the area where these drains pitalized for this procedure? were in, and the muscles have spread apart DR. GOULD. Overnight for the polyp. just a small amount there. DR. CAIN. He will be in the hospital for Q. Do they call this an incisional hernia? several days all together, with this, but he DR. CAIN. That would be a proper name will be in good shape as soon as he is out for it. from under any anesthesia that he is given, Q. How do you repair it? and it will be a very minor disability from DR. CAIN. It is very simple in that you that standpoint. 1312 Lyndon B. Johnson, 1966 Nov. 3 [575] Q. Will both operations be done at the DR. CAIN. It is not an emergency in that same time and under the same anesthesia? way. MR. MOYERS. Yes. Q. Did the doctors recommend against a Q. Would it require as much anesthesia weekend political trip with all of its talking? as in the last operation? DR. BURKLEY. I recommended that the MR. MOYERS. No. President, inasmuch as this was indicated, Q. How long is the operation? or this surgery was indicated, have it done MR. MOYERS. Probably less than an hour at an early date. On the basis of that, I rec- for both things, from beginning to end. ommended that he have a period of rest of Q. Are these things of an emergency na- approximately 2 weeks beforehand. ture, that they have to be done? I feel that that indicates against a week- DR. CAIN. No, these things are things that end trip, as you mentioned. we have recognized, actually, as Dr. Burkley Q. Did this Asian trip aggravate the situa- mentioned, for some time. Many people tion at all, Doctor? have these, and ordinarily, or often, you can DR. BURKLEY. I beg your pardon? do nothing about them. But during this Q. Did the trip to the Far East aggravate trip, as some of you know, he was quite this? active in doing an awful lot of standing and DR. BURKLEY. It aggravated it, but the walking and so forth, and this seemed to be symptoms were there. There was a slight enlarging very slightly. increase, and we noted a slight increase in Dr. Burkley, at that time, I think, decided the size of the protrusion during that trip. that he thought we ought to go ahead and Therefore, I would think that there was repair these. some effect from the strenuous trip. While doing it, we decided we would take Q. Did it cause him great pain during the care of both things at the same time and get trip? it done. DR. BURKLEY. Not great pain, but just Q. Could it have waited until next week? stress, a little disturbance there, and a pull- DR. CAIN. Well, once the decision is made, ing sensation, and a drawing sensation in I think you ought to go ahead and get it the area. done. This is the thing. Q. You mentioned he was wearing a back I do think that extra working and exercise, brace. Has the President worn a back brace and so forth, adds to the enlargement a little very often? bit. DR. BURKLEY. He has been wearing it Q. Did the President ask if it could be quite regularly, since this protrusion was delayed any? noted. It was noted in April. DR. CAIN. He asked our advice about MR. MOYERS. The protrusion was noted in whether it should be delayed, and Dr. April, and the polyp was noted in August. Burkley and I certainly concur that, for Q. Dr. Gould, is a polyp like this generally many reasons, one, because of the fatigue of malignant or generally not malignant? this trip, and so forth, and getting ready for DR. GOULD. It is not generally, but it will this operable procedure, I thought that he be tested, regardless. ought to take some time off. I hope he will. Q. Will anyone fill in for the period when Q. You don't describe this in the nature the President is under anesthesia? of an emergency? MR. MOYERS. I don't believe SO. 74-767-67-Vol. II-11 1313 [575] Nov. 3 Public Papers of the Presidents Q. Would it be fair to say that further Those of you who wish to may leave at effort on the President's part would further this point. aggravate his condition? Q. What is the President's weight? Can DR. BURKLEY. It is my opinion that inas- we get some vital statistics on the President, much as he has noted some change in it dur- like what does he weigh? ing this Asian trip, that it would be advisable DR. BURKLEY. He weighs somewhat over not to do a similar trip until the repair is 200 pounds. accomplished. Q. Somewhat over? MR. MOYERS. Let me make certain that DR. BURKLEY. He contemplates a diet you understand the material in the package. program during this period prior to the You will get the biographical sketches of the surgery. men who are here-Dr. Burkley, Dr. Devine, Q. Do you want him below 200 pounds? Dr. Cain, and Dr. Gould. You will also get DR. BURKLEY. We would like to have him a biographical sketch on Dr. Hallenbeck, around the same weight as he had at the who is not here, but who will again perform time of the other surgery. the surgery. Q. Which was what? You will also get a biographical sketch DR. BURKLEY. Around 198 or 196, I think, on Dr. Edward Paul Didier, consultant in but he may not lose that much. He is a tall anesthesiology in the Mayo Clinic, and in- man, and actually a lot of men smaller than structor in anesthesiology in the Mayo Grad- he is weigh around 200 or 210, and think uate School of Medicine, who was the nothing of it. If he gets down to that, he is President's anesthetist last fall. really doing very well. There is also a biography of Dr. J. Willis Q. How much over 200 is he? Hurst, professor and chairman of the De- DR. BURKLEY. I don't know exactly. He partment of Medicine, of the Emory Univer- had been ranging around between 200 and sity School of Medicine, and continuing con- 215. I don't know exactly what his weight sultant to the President. has been the last few days or weeks. Also there will be a sketch on Dr. Lay MR. MOYERS. Thank you, gentlemen. M. Fox, the White House physician. NOTE: President Johnson's eighty-first news confer- ence was held in the Cabinet Room at the White House at 3:30 p.m. on Thursday, November 3, 1966. 576 Remarks at the Signing of the Truth-in-Packaging and Child Protection Bills. November 3, 1966 Mr. Vice President, Secretary Connor, Sen- you will pardon my being a little late. ator Hart, Congressman Staggers, and We have come here this evening to fulfill Members of Congress: two obligations that we have to the Amer- First I ask your indulgence and under- ican family. standing because I have been talking to -We are here to defend truth. Speaker McCormack, Senator Mansfield, -We are here to avoid tragedy. and Senator Dirksen, reporting on my trip The two laws that I shall sign this evening and my physical condition. I thought that will help the American housewife to save rather desirable and necessary. And I know her pennies and dimes, and the American 1314 U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT February 9, 1976 MEDICAL PROFILE OF GERALD FORD Age: 62 on July 14, 1975 TELLING ALL ABOUT Height: 6 feet 1 inch. Weight: 194 pounds-16 less A PRESIDENT'S HEALTH than when he assumed the Presi- dency in August, 1974. Heart and vascular systems: A UNUSUALLY FRANK REPORT on the sin's bullet nearly four years ago. Cover- "Excellent" health of President Ford is putting nor Wallace says he is physically able to pressure on other candidates to "go be President and that he would agree to Pulse: 60 beats per minute- public" on their medical secrets, if any. an independent medical exam if other "slow as generally seen in After Mr. Ford's annual physical ex- candidates do likewise. conditioned athletes." amination late in January. his doctor A dissenting voice. Dr. William Ln- described him as being as healthy "as a kash, the President's personal physician. Blood pressure: 120 over 70. conditioned athlete." disagrees on the total disclosure of Mr. Ford, in making public his de- medical records and examinations. He Cholesterol count: 275-within tailed medical record, was following his worries about the harm to the confiden- normal range of 190-310. own stated feeling that it would be a tial patient-physician relationship, along "good idea" for all candidates to give with the "bad precedent" of such a Eyes: Is nearsighted, requiring voters a close look at their health. move. glasses only for distant vision. Some- contenders-Democrats Sar- As for the President's health, both gent Shriver and Fred Harris, among Mr. Ford and Dr. Lukash agreed on the Knees: Some minor degegerative them-have issued public statements "fit as a fiddle" analysis. The doctor said changes in both knees, with ten- giving a general picture of their phys- the President's athletic background has dency to swell occasionally after ical condition. A number of others have disciplined him to daily exercise, a skiing. supplied medical records to the publica- closely watched diet and plenty of vig- tion Medical World News. orous activity such as skiing, golfing and Smoking: Six or seven pipeloads The extent of detail varied consider- swimming. a day. with no pulmonary compli- ably, however, ranging from broad sum- Mr. Ford's daily routine begins at cations or irritation of mouth. maries to results of laboratory tests. In 5:30 a.m. with 10 minutes of calisthen- general. their phy sicians found the can- ics, leg lifts with a 35-pound weight for Workday: 14 to 15 hours, seven didates in "good health." Many had his bad football knees and a half-mile days a week in recent months. cause to seck more than routine medi- "ride" on a stationary bicycle. At might, cal treatment for a variety of problems. the President likes to cap his 14 or 15- Exercise: Follows vigorous daily Focus on health. Public attention hour workday with swimming 24 routine, usually including weight- has been focused on the health issue lengths-br a quarter mile-in the lifting to strengthen knees. riding before, but rarely to the degree that it White House pool. on exercise bicycle, calisthenics. is coming up in-this election year. Politi- Mr. Ford has lost 16 pounds-down to quarter mile of swimming. cal observers say pressure for detailed 194 from 210-in the 17 months he has accountings may grow more intense, been President Medical history: Appendectomy perhaps even for examination by inde- During the last year. Mr. Ford has as a child. Fracture of right collar- pendent medical experts. had a bad cold, had a small benign wart bone at age 14. Knee operations Part of the reason for the heightened removed from his lip and has had some in 1929 and 1972. Hemorrhoidal interest in the health issue is the condi- slight swelling of his knees-both of surgery in 1945. Heavy cold with tion of Governor George Wallace of Al. which have been operated on-after sinus infection in October, 1975. abama, who is paralyzed from the waist skiing. His doctor reported no ill effects Benign wart on left upper lip Te. down as the result of a would-be assas- from any of these conditions. moved in December. 18 Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 7 1ST STORY of Level 1 printed in FULL format. Copyright (c) 1978 The Washington Post March 26, 1978, Sunday, Final Edition SECTION: Outlook; C1 LENGTH: 3260 words HEADLINE: We Must Know More About Our Leaders' Health; The Public's Right To Health Data BYLINE: By Victor Cohn; Cohn a medical writer for the Washington Post, is currently a visiting fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health. BODY: DO WE Americans have a right to know whether our elected officials are phisically and mentally fit to serve us? Such a right is still far from established. Many doctors are only too willing to obfuscate for their political patients, to remain uninformative or inaccessible or to tell the public 50 much less than the truth that they mislead us. A5 Dr. William J. Curran, professor of legal medicine at Harvard University, wrote in the New England Journal of Medicine last September, doctors treating public figures "have sometimes imposed too impenetrable a barrier around the patients grees a white gauze curtain - to the extent of actually distorting the true picture." The recent death of Sen. Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, a case in which the public knew so little for 50 long about his 10-year bout with cancer, has brought this point sharply home againg. But the Humphrey case is only the latest of several still in public memory, to say nothing of others more distant. There was the Eagleton affair, in which a man with a history of emotional breakdowns may might have become vice president without the public ever learning of his medical past. There was the time during during the Kennedy presidency when, in the midst of a crisis that could have led to nuclear war, the president was taking a medicine that often creates euphoria. Such events prompt Dr. Joseph Fletcher, professor of medical ethics at the University of Virginia, to remark: "It seems absurd to have laws that requires candidates or public officeholders to disclose their bank accounts, but allow them to pursue office or function in office while secretly suffering illnessess that could interfere with their performance. I'd rather have a rich man, with some temptation to favor his investments, in public office than I would a man with a brain tumor." Similarly, Dr. James Nicholas, who once treated President Kennedy, says: "It is appalling to have candidates running for office who have documented infirmities that they don't permit the public to know." Harvard's Dr. Curran adds: "WE need to begin to develop public policy and some kind of regular procedure" to give the public the facts about "the health of their officeholders We need to think about putting into law such requirements One place where we might start would be regular LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 8 (c) 1978 The Washington Post, March 26, 1978 examinaions to measure the continuing capacity of those already in office." Melancholia and Migraines THE QUESTION is not whether illness or disability should automatically disqualify a person from publlic office. Abran Lincoln suffered severe bouts of depression, known then as melancholia. Thomas Jefferson was often laid low with migraine headaches. Both Dwight D. Eisenhower and Lyndon Johson won election after suffering heart attacks, and John F. Kennedy's admirers would maintain that mede a better president with some adrenal insufficency than Richard Nixon did at the height of his health. But the point is that informed voters, not officeholders, should be the ones to make the decision. Sen. Humphrey told me himself in April, 1976: "I don't believe in having sick people in office, though I don't say a person can't have minor disabilities and serve his country well." But politicians, like the rest of us, are not inclined to face their own mortality, to accept deadly diseases as more than minor disabilities, or to relinquish their power, and for a long time Sen. Humphrey was no exception. Understandable as it may have been, his long reluntance to lay bare all his medical records might have had serious consequences. If he had won the Democratic Presidential normination again in the summer of 1976, his illness would have left his party badly in the lurch. For once he checked into the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center for drastic cancer surgery that October, just a month before the election, his race would have been ended. As he said on that painful occasion: "There's no question that I would have had to step aside" as the candidate. That almost certainly would have thrown the race to Gerald Ford. Yet even after that operation and after that statement by Humphrey, a Memorial Sloan -Kettering press release papered over the grim meaning of his advanced cancer. And when a few reporters explained that the press release meant a patient with Humphrey's condition had one chance in four of surviving five years, they were castigated by some persons close to Humphrey as heartless and misleading. These included the senator's personal physician, Dr. Edgar Berman, who called a Washington Post report "irresponsible" and "inaccurate." CONSIDER the deaths of the Humphrey case. In June, 1937, when Humphrey was vice president, some red blood cells first showed up in his urine. As Dr. W. Dabney Jerman, his urologist, said later, that was "the beginning" of what turned out to be his fatal illness. An examination a year later showed what was then termed a "dysplssia," or abnormality of his bladder lining. Although Humphrey was about to run for the presidency, scarcely anybody in the country was aware of his condition. In the early 1970s most doctors began calling the type condition he had in situ carcinoma and talking it more seriously. Carcinoma means "cancer," and in situ means in a limited site, without the invasion of the surrounding area that sounds the greater alarm. Doctors differed, and still differ somewhat, on whether this condition should be attacked like a fully invasive bladder cancer. Doctors differed in the Humphrey case. But there was no public hint of this LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 9 (c) 1978 The Washington Post, March 26, 1978 debate, though Humphrey by then was back in the Senate representing Minnesotans. In 1972 Humphrey's doctors began regularly using an anti-cancer chemical - as a "precaution" or "presentative," they said four years later, when this first became publicly known. Over the years, in fact, the physicians who actually treated Humphrey - a team headed by Dr. Jarman - remained largely silent, leaving press statements chiefly to Humphrey's medical adviser and friend, Dr. Berman. Berman consistently issued rosy views. In 1973 the doctors treated a "more potentially cancerous" change with X-rays. This was publicized. But through 1974 and 1975 there was no mention of any further life-threatening problem or the continuing chemotherapy, though in situ carconoma cells were still appearing in every examination. The fact that Sen. Humphrey had been flirting with actual or incipient cancer since 1967 was finally discloced by him and his doctors in April, 1976. This was done only in response to a press inquiry. That January, as Humphrey's name came to the fore as a presidential contender, those close to him recall, Humphrey suggested to Dr. Jarman that an honest statement be prepared to answer any inquiries. Thus the statement was ready when The Washington Post inquired (though Dr. Berman still argued publicly that the in situ carcinoma it described was not significant). That summer Humphrey kept emphasizing his "excellent health." But when Medical World News, a physicians' magazine, broke new ground by succesfully asking all the avowed presidential candidates for their medical records, Humphrey declined to release his because he had not formally declared himself. That fall came his Memorial Sloan-Kettering cancer surgery. Some days later Dr. Willard Whitmore, the surgeon, issued the following statement: "Sen. Humphrey continues to do exceptionally well in recuperating The pathology report indicates that the cancer was of low grade histologically, but had penetrated the bladder wall and involves some of the regional lymph nodes. A systematic regional lymph node dissection was performed. The margins of dissection were made clear by microscopic examination; no transsection of the tumor occured. There was no evidence of spread beyond the perimeter of surgery. Therefore, it is entirely possible that the surgery has been curative." "Let Them Be Completely Candid" AN ORDINARY reader might have interpreted such a statement as good news, meaning "they got it all." Wire services, TV networks and most newspapers indeed carried reports which said or implied that cheery outcome. Only The Minneapolis Tribune, The New York Post and The Washington Post added the information necessary to make the meaning clearer: National Cancer Institute statistics show that in bladder cancer with lymph node involvement the five-year survival rate is only 23 per cent, whether all the obvious cancer is removed or not. Hubert Humphrey, of course, remained an individual to whom the statistics might or might not apply. But the Memorial doctors knew they were dealing with an alarmingly advanced case of a particularly recalcitrant type of cancer. LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 10 (c) 1978 The Washington Post, March 26, 1978 Humphrey, too, knew these facts and, according to a former Humphrey aide, he often told his staff: "Let the doctors, not the public relations people, make all the statements. Let them be completely candid. Nothing else will be credible." That he or his staff or his doctors did not always meet this goal may speak in part of politics, in part of human hesitation when an ugly disease must be faced. And the evasion had not yet quite ended by then. Last August - when Humphrey entered the University of Minnesota Hospitals for what doctors there felt was certainly a further growth of his malignancy - the university's first statement, prepared by a Humphrey aide, told the public he was merely "accomodat[ing] his vacation" by having a "checkup" and continuing his chemotherapy in Minnesota instead of Washinton. This bald evasion deeply disturbed the university surgery chief, Dr. John Najarian. Najarian told a Humphrey aide that if he was expected to tell the public anything less than the truth, he would withdraw and let someone else do the surgery. He did not withdraw and he told the fuller truth: that Humphrey's cancer was "inoperable" and "terminal." This was one of two recent cases of notable candor. Another doctor early last year insisted on giving the public the facts in a sentitive political case. The patient this time was Maryland's malfeasant governor, Marvin Mandel. A sudden stroke or apparent stroke had raised serious questions about his ability to stand a second trial after the first ended in a mistrial. His reported illness aroused skepticism among many persons who were convinced Mandel had found a new way to avoid facing justice. A murky or overblown medical report might have helped Mandel avoid the second trial that ended his political life. But before even examining him, Dr. Marvin Korengold, the Washington neurologist consulted by Mandel's family doctor, told the governor that if he entered teh case, he would be candid with the public no matter what he found. Dr. Korengold was candid. He said Mandel had had a stroke but would in time be able to stand trial. Bot truth and justice were satisfied. Historical Evasion UNFORTUNATELY, however, such candor historically has been the exception, not the rule. President Grover Cleveland underwent cancer surgery on a yacht in New York harbor 50 that the news, so he said, wouldn't affect the stock market. Woodrow Wilson suffered a physical collapse in September, 1919, and a stroke a week later. For more than a year the nation was run in large part by his wife while Wilson's disappearance was only vaguely explained. Americans learned of Franklin Roosevelt's failing heart and advanced hypertension only after his death. Dwight Eisenhower's physicians were generally candid about his illnesses, but John Kennedy never admitted that he had Addison's disease, conceding only to a onetime "adrenal insufficiency," which means the same thing. Nor did he disclose that he was taking steroids, which can make the taker unnaturally euphoric, and was taking them at the time of the Bay of Pigs and Cuban missile crisis. Dr. Nicholas, the New York orthopedic surgeon who later gained attention as custodian of Joe Namath's knees, wrote the facts about Kennedy (as an unnamed former patient) in the Archives of Surgery in 1955. Another doctor who knew LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 11 (c) 1978 The Washington Post, March 26, 1978 Kennedy said to me a few years ago: "I treated him when he was a senator. I took care of him in moments of adrenal crisis. Throughout his campaign when there was more and more evidence that he was being treated with steroids, one could not help but wonder what kind of mental decisions he might make and about his emotional states." Lyndon Johnson showed us his operative scar after his gall bladder operation and carried a copy of his electrocardiogram to show he had recovered from a heart attack. He did conceal the removal of a skin cancer, a highly curable one common to sun-beaten Texans. Only this winter Sen. George McGovern disclosed his psychiatric consultants' reactions when they learned that his running mate, Sen. Thomas Eagleton, had a history of mental depression and hospitalization serious enough to require electro-shock therapy on two of his three stays. In his autobiography, "From Grassroots," McGovern writes that Dr. Karl Menninger reluctantly advised him that "for the interest of the nation you can afford no risks and I would therefore hope and you would ask Mr. Eagleton to step down." In this case as in others, the facts had long been concealed from the public. McGovern writes that "when [Eagleton] left for the Mayo Clinci in 1966 in a serious mental depression that resulted in weeks of hospitalization and electro-shock treatment, the story his office released was that he was at Johns Hopkins for treatment of a gastric disturbance." When president Roosevelt's physician, Adm. Ross McIntyre, was asked by the press about Roosevelt's health shortly before FDR's reelection to a fourth term, he said it was "that expected of a man in his sixties" except for "a little sinus trouble." The press was successfully dissuaded, sometimes in force by the Secret Service, from ever photographing FOR sitting in his weekchair, moving laboriously on his crutches or, more often as the years went by, being carried bodily from place to place. There is no doubt that Eagleton's withdrawals as vice presidential candidate in 1972 helped prompt all the avowed presidential and vice presidential candidates in 1976 to agree to bare their medical records to Medical World News. Jimmy Carter not only released his, but insisted that all six contenders for the Democratic vice presidential slot do the same. One result was the first disclosure that then Sen. Walter Mondale had hypertension (successfully controlled by medication). President Ford became the first president in office to reveal all the details of his routine physical this, again, to Medical World News. But President Carter, who was so medically candid a candidate, has so far permitted the release of only an unspecific, 130 word press release = one with no corroborating details or statistics - on his latest physical, despite I request for a full report by the same medical magazine. What of lesser officials? In 1972 New York Democratic Rep. William F. Ryan denied reports that he had cancer while running for reelection. He died during the campaign. In 1974 Manhattan District Attorney Frank Hogan was hospitalized for a "checkup," or so he said. He too actually had cancer. He was reelected - but had to resign because of his illness. The governor, not the voters, chose his successor. LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 12 (c) 1978 The Washington Post, March 26, 1978 Last September the suggestion that all major federal appointees and candidates for Congress routinely disclose their medical histories was made by Federal Judge Frank M. Johnson Jr., who had just been nominated to head the FBI. Ironically, he made it while he was recovering from surgery; when he was slow to recover, he had to give up the job. Harvard's Dr. Curran thinks that even the Johnson suggestion might not be enough. What we need, he says, is "not just disclosure of the statement of a physician engaged by the patient" - or, in the case of a president, the statement in most instances of a military doctor - but "an independent, nonpartisan medical evaluation." Dr. Curran thinks such a requirement should be written into the law governing presidential succession, which now allows a president to make his own decision about his capacities. The University of Virginia's Dr. Fletcher thinks doctors sometimes should go even further on their own. He believes that if a president or presidential candidate refuses to reveal "whatever information is relevant to the public's ability to form a judgment [on] whether he is competent to serve," the physician should speak up if the facts are "manifestly vital to the public's interest." "When the greatest good of the greatest number is at stake, no individual's rights or interests should be allowed to dominate," he contends. "This is a problem that arises in medicine all the time. Sometimes the vell of professional secrecy has to be lifted to protect a family or the public." Dr. Fletcher cites a case where secrecy should have been lifted but was not: "That of Winston Churchill. In the last year or more of his tenure as prime minister, his deterioration was both mental and physical. He was subject because of changes in his brain to all sorts of odd and outrageous behavior and ideas. The cabinet was puzzled and, because of respect for him, reluctant to act. Had Lord Moran, his physician, told them, 'He is a man suffering from a physical breakdown and unreliable to rely on,' they would have acted. Interestingly, it was Mrs. Churchill rather than Lord Moran who finally told them he was really not competent." When Private Matters Become Public SOME DOCTORS probably will continue to obfuseate or remain silent on demand. They might note that the American Medical Association's Judicial Council, the main arbiter of American medical ethics, has said a doctor may not discuss a patient's health with the press without the consent of the patient or a representative. But the council added: "Public figures are in a different position, in regard to publicity, than the ordinary citizen. One of the penalties of being in the public eye is the automatic surrender of a portion, at least, of one's right of privacy A patient by virtur of his position may have an obligation to others. If so, he must know and discharge that obligation ito the electorate or to the stockholders or to others to whom the is responsible). The physician should insure the accuracy of any authorized report A physician may, within the limits of good taste, encourage the patient or his family to state the cause of illness when this information is requested by a bona fide representative of the press.* By Dr. Najarian's and Dr. Korengold's examples last year, physicians shouls not only encourage disclosure, but in some cases refuse to take the patient LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS Services of Mead Data Central PAGE 13 (c) 1978 The Washington Post, March 26, 1978 without it. The doctor who does less may cure his patient but damage the public and injure his own reputations as well. Dr. Curran does not think Americans would lightly or foolishly turn thumbs down on an officeholder or seeker for any but the most serious mental or physical reasons. He says: "The knowledge and sophistication of the American public about disease and treatment is much more sophisticated than we sometimes think. We're living with a good deal of chronic disease in this country. And the public tends to be eternally optimistic." But whatever the decision, it should be the public's. GRAPHIC: Illustration 1, no caption, by Ray Driver for the Washington Post; Illustration 2, no caption, by John Twohey for the Washington Post; Picture, Dr. John Najarian explains operation performed on Sen. Hubert Humphrey. UPI LEXIS NEXIS LEXIS NEXIS