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View Full Version : CNN doctor contradicts real doctor who actually saw Trump



jimnyc
01-17-2018, 01:02 PM
How overwhelmingly irresponsible to attempt to diagnose a patient without physically seeing them. And giving "results" to the American people no less. I'm confident that the man in front of him from Walter Reed knows what he is doing, as were any lab folks and other technicians. He could very well be correct about the numbers, as they usually don't lie. But to declare an actual heart disease is very poor habit for a doctor, IMO.

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Dr. Sanjay Gupta: Trump Has Heart Disease

CNN doctor Sanjay Gupta claimed that President Donald Trump has heart disease, contradicting an assessment from Trump’s own personal doctor.

White House doctor Ronny Jackson said Wednesday that although Trump takes medication for high cholesterol and is overweight, the president has normal cardiac health for a man his age.

Gupta, who has never examined the president, insisted on CNN Wednesday morning that Trump definitely has heart disease.

Gupta pointed to the president’s coronary calcium score of 133, because a score of over 100 indicates a high risk of heart attack within 3-5 years.

“That’s concerning,” Gupta said. “When you look at the findings you just put up there…this coronary calcium score is a score a lot of cardiologists use to try and be predictive and be proactive.”

Rest - http://dailycaller.com/2018/01/17/dr-sanjay-gupta-trump-has-heart-disease-video/

Black Diamond
01-17-2018, 01:06 PM
More crap from CNN. Who'd a thunk it. American Pravda.

aboutime
01-17-2018, 04:05 PM
Saw all of those FAKE NEWS idiots asking the doctor questions THEY SHOULD KNOW, he cannot answer. Doctor-Patient privilege for one, and it would be against his oath, as a doctor.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Hippocratic-oath

Hippocratic oath
ETHICAL CODE
WRITTEN BY: The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica
LAST UPDATED: 11-15-2017 See Article History

Hippocrates, adopted as a guide to conduct by the medical profession throughout the ages and still used in the graduation ceremonies of many medical schools. Although little is known of the life of Hippocrates—or, indeed, if he was the only practitioner of the time using this name—a body of manuscripts, called the Hippocratic Collection (Corpus Hippocraticum), survived until modern times. In addition to containing information on medical matters, the collection embodied a code of principles for the teachers of medicine and for their students. This code, or a fragment of it, has been handed down in various versions through generations of physicians as the Hippocratic oath.