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Harold N. Bornstein, Trump’s Former Personal Physician, Dies at 73 - He attested that Trump would be the ‘healthiest president ever’

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  john-russell  •  3 years ago  •  4 comments

Harold N. Bornstein, Trump’s Former Personal Physician, Dies at 73 -      He attested that Trump would be the ‘healthiest president ever’
It was after this series of events, which took place over a couple of years, that Dr. Bornstein finally said publicly in 2018 what many had suspected all along — that Mr. Trump himself had written the letter saying that he would be the healthiest president ever. “He dictated that whole letter,” he told CNN. “I didn’t write that letter.”

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Dr. Harold N. Bornstein in his office on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in 2016. He inherited Donald Trump as a patient from his father, who whom he shared the practice for many years.Credit...Chantal Heijnen

Dr. Harold N. Bornstein, who for a time was President Donald J. Trump’s personal physician and who had attested that Mr. Trump would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency,” died on Friday. He was 73.

His death was announced on Thursday in a paid notice in The New York Times. It did not give a cause or say where he died.

Loquacious, hirsute and eccentric, Dr. Bornstein, a gastroenterologist, was Mr. Trump’s personal physician from 1980 to 2017. He had inherited Mr. Trump as a patient from his father, Dr. Jacob Bornstein, with whom he shared a medical practice on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, at Park Avenue and 78th Street.

When Mr. Trump was elected president in 2016, Dr. Bornstein had hoped to be named White House physician and suggested as much to a longtime Trump assistant. But he was expelled from the Trump orbit after he disclosed to The New York Times that the president was taking medication to make his hair grow.

Dr. Bornstein came to public attention in December 2015, during his famous patient’s campaign for president.

Mr. Trump, a Republican, had been insinuating that Hillary Clinton, his likely Democratic opponent, did not have the stamina to serve as president. In response to questions about his own health, he ordered Dr. Bornstein to issue “a full medical report.” Mr. Trump predicted that although he would be 70 when he took office, the oldest president ever to be inaugurated for the first time, the report would show that the state of his health was “perfection.”

He soon released a four-paragraph letter signed by Dr. Bornstein saying that his blood pressure and unspecified lab test results were “astonishingly excellent,” and that his strength and stamina were “extraordinary.”

Using hyperbole more often associated with Mr. Trump than with the medical profession, the letter added: “If elected, Mr. Trump, I can state unequivocally, will be the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency.”

The statement, which Dr. Bornstein insisted he had written, brought him a flurry of publicity, but as time went on, the media interviewed him about other topics.

He told The Times that he had had no contact with Mr. Trump since he had become president and that the White House had not asked him to forward Mr. Trump’s medical records, as new administrations traditionally do.

He also complained of the poor seats he had been assigned for the president’s inauguration.

Dr. Bornstein later told NBC News that two days after The Times article appeared, three representatives of Mr. Trump had “raided” his office and taken all of Mr. Trump’s medical records. They also told him to remove a picture he had on the wall of him with Mr. Trump.

“I feel raped,” Dr. Bornstein told NBC.

White House officials told NBC that no raid had occurred, that the men had retrieved the president’s medical records as “standard operating procedure,” and that Dr. Bornstein had been cooperative.

Still, Dr. Bornstein said he felt that he was being punished for talking to The Times. He said that Rhona Graff, Mr. Trump’s longtime executive assistant and senior vice president of the Trump Organization, had called him after the article appeared and told him: “So you wanted to be the White House doctor? Forget it, you’re out.”

It was after this series of events, which took place over a couple of years, that Dr. Bornstein finally said publicly in 2018 what many had suspected all along — that Mr. Trump himself had written the letter saying that he would be the healthiest president ever.

“He dictated that whole letter,” he told CNN . “I didn’t write that letter.”


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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    3 years ago
It was after this series of events, which took place over a couple of years, that Dr. Bornstein finally said publicly in 2018 what many had suspected all along — that Mr. Trump himself had written the letter saying that he would be the healthiest president ever. “He dictated that whole letter,”  he told CNN  . “I didn’t write that letter.”
 
 
 
Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom
Professor Guide
2  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom    3 years ago

We guessed that the letter was bullshit, but I had no idea about the office robbery.  Everything Trump touches has a criminal element.

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
2.1  Tessylo  replied to  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom @2    3 years ago

No surprise.  He's such a mobster, thug, gangster, grifter, thief. . . to mention just a few

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.2  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom @2    3 years ago

When Mr. Trump was elected president in 2016, Dr. Bornstein had hoped to be named White House physician and suggested as much to a longtime Trump assistant. But he was expelled from the Trump orbit after he disclosed to The New York Times that the president was taking medication to make his hair grow.  jrSmiley_86_smiley_image.gif

 
 

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