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During a rally in Tehran on Friday, a woman held a photo of Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran’s new supreme leader, in front of a banner showing his father, who was killed in recent U.S.-Israeli strikes.
In-Depth Context: Age and health concerns about Donald Trump
At 79 years old, Donald Trump, the 45th and 47th president of the United States, became the oldest person in American history to become president upon his second inauguration in 2025. In July 2024, five weeks after his 78th birthday, he became the oldest presidential nominee of a major party. Should he serve as president until at least August 15, 2028, he would be the oldest sitting president in American history. On January 20, 2029, the end of his second term, he would be 82 years, seven months, and six days old. Since the early days of Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, his physical and mental health have been debated. Trump was 70 years old when he first took office, surpassing Ronald Reagan as the oldest person to assume the presidency. Trump's age, weight, lifestyle, and history of heart disease raised questions about his physical health. Some psychiatrists and reporters have speculated that Trump may have mental health impairments, such as dementia (which his father had) or narcissistic personality disorder. Such claims have prompted discussion about the ethics and applicability of the Goldwater rule, which prohibits mental health professionals from publicly diagnosing or discussing the diagnosis of public figures without their consent and direct examination. Public opinion polling from July 2024 indicated an increase in the percentage of Americans concerned about his fitness for a second term. Trump's 2024 presidential campaign refused to release basic medical records on Trump's health for a significant period, with the most recent release being in 2015. A number of official reports have since been made, concluding that Trump was in "excellent health" and "fully fit" to serve as president. Overall concerns have nonetheless continued to abound throughout his second presidency, with both Trump insiders and outside critics directly discussing supposed health risks and their future impacts, up to and including a presidential succession by Vice President JD Vance.
== Background and lifestyle == Coverage of Trump's mental acuity has generated discussion of whether the media has been "sanewashing" Trump by selecting more coherent clips or quotes from his speeches that give a false impression of mental acuity without balancing that coverage by also focusing on the parts of his speeches that might raise concerns about his mental fitness to be president. As of 2018, Trump does not drink alcohol; this decision arose in part from watching his older brother Fred Jr. suffer from alcoholism that contributed to his early death in 1981. He also said that he has never smoked cigarettes or consumed drugs, including marijuana. Trump, in his personal life, subscribes to the fringe and pseudoscientific view of battery theory, positing that a human is born with only a finite amount of energy, which is depleted by physical activity. Trump therefore avoids most types of exercise apart from golf in the belief that this would cause him to die sooner. The concept has been widely debunked by mainstream medical science.
== 2016 presidential campaign (2015–2016) == In December 2015, Trump's personal physician, Harold Bornstein, released a letter praising Trump for "extraordinary physical strength and stamina". The letter asserted that Trump would be "the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency" and said that a recent medical exam yielded "only positive results". Before Bornstein's death in 2021, he told CNN that Trump had dictated the entire letter. The language used was in Trump's style and not typical of a medical doctor; in particular, the American journalist Kurt Eichenwald noted that positive test results do not necessarily mean a favorable outcome for the patient. A follow-up medical report by Bornstein claimed that Trump's blood pressure, liver and thyroid functions were within the normal range, and that he takes a statin. At 6 feet 3 inches (1.90 m) and 236 pounds (107 kg), Trump's body mass index of 29.5 registered on the higher end of overweight BMIs. During the 2016 Republican Party presidential primaries, presidential candidate and primary opponent Jeb Bush speculated in February 2016 that Trump had mental health issues, stating, "I'm not a psychiatrist or a psychologist, but the guy needs therapy."
== First presidency and 2020 presidential campaign (2017–2020) ==
=== 2017 === The "Duty to Warn" movement was founded by medical professionals concerned about Trump's cognitive health in his first year in office. In 2016 and 2017, a number of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists faced criticism for violating the Goldwater rule; despite having never examined him, they maintained that Donald Trump displayed "an assortment of personality problems, including grandiosity, a lack of empathy, and 'malignant narcissism'", and that he had a "dangerous mental illness". In 2017, psychologist John Gartner collected more than 41,000 signatures of mental health professionals on a petition, directed to then-Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. The petition asserted that Trump suffered from a serious mental illness and was "psychologically incapable of competently discharging the duties" of the presidency. Gartner asserted that Trump's mental handicaps are a mix of narcissism, paranoia, sociopathy, and sadism. In February 2017, psychiatrist Allen Frances wrote a letter to the editor of The New York Times regarding Trump and narcissistic personality disorder. Frances said, "I wrote the criteria that define this disorder, and Mr. Trump doesn't meet them." According to the American Psychiatric Association, "saying that a person does not have an illness is also a professional opinion." On April 14, 2017, Representatives Jamie Raskin and Earl Blumenauer introduced the Oversight Commission on Presidential Capacity Act. The bill, if passed, would have allowed Congress, by a concurrent resolution, to require an 11-member commission to conduct an examination of the president and report the findings. I
Background information sourced from Wikipedia: Age and health concerns about Donald Trump under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Original Source: Trump adds to speculation about Iranian leader’s condition.
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