<code id='47F513D579'></code><style id='47F513D579'></style>
    • <acronym id='47F513D579'></acronym>
      <center id='47F513D579'><center id='47F513D579'><tfoot id='47F513D579'></tfoot></center><abbr id='47F513D579'><dir id='47F513D579'><tfoot id='47F513D579'></tfoot><noframes id='47F513D579'>

    • <optgroup id='47F513D579'><strike id='47F513D579'><sup id='47F513D579'></sup></strike><code id='47F513D579'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='47F513D579'><label id='47F513D579'><select id='47F513D579'><dt id='47F513D579'><span id='47F513D579'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='47F513D579'></u>
          <i id='47F513D579'><strike id='47F513D579'><tt id='47F513D579'><pre id='47F513D579'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          leisure time

          leisure time

          author:fashion    Page View:625
          Photo illustration of newspaper clips written by Lawrence K Altman about presidents' health – opinion coverage from STAT
          Alex Hogan/STAT

          When I interviewed Ronald Reagan about his health in 1980, he was 69 and poised to become the oldest person to be elected president. During our conversation, Reagan was mentally sharp. In a light moment he feigned a wrenched back and asked what I (a physician) would do for it.

          I asked him about his mother’s health, and he told me that his mother had symptoms suggestive of dementia before she died. I asked what he would do if, as president, he developed the same ailment, and how he would know he had it. His doctors would follow him, he said, and he would resign if they found evidence of cognitive decline. Years later, those remarks would seem particularly noteworthy.

          advertisement

          The interview was likely the first in which a future president and his doctors discussed the leader’s health prospectively. (That cooperation was short-lived; Reagan’s aides did not allow reporters to interview him or his doctors when he ran for re-election after what some regarded as a poor debate performance with Walter Mondale.)

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          explore

          Medicare proposal to cover medical devices draws a mixed reaction
          Medicare proposal to cover medical devices draws a mixed reaction

          AdobeThemedicaldeviceindustryissplitonwhetheraproposednewMedicarereimbursementpathwaywilldoanythingt

          read more
          Ukraine and a new approach to mental health in war
          Ukraine and a new approach to mental health in war

          AUkrainiancadetholdsanartificialflowerinthecoloroftheUkrainianflagontheoutskirtsofKyiv.SERGEISUPINSK

          read more
          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap
          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap

          Screenshotviacallingbullshit.orgTiredofalternativefacts,fakenews,andbreathlesshyperbole,twoprofessor

          read more

          Senate HELP committee spars over health care workforce policies 

          Sen.BillCassidy(R-La.),left,andSen.BernieSanders(I-Vt.),right,clashedoverabilltoincreaseranksinthehe