Trump Dismisses Reports of Ill Health
By Reuters | 02 Sep, 2025
A four-day absence from the public eye, an aberration for the social media presidency, had provoked online rumors of severe illness and even death.
President Donald Trump on Tuesday said reports on social media that he is in ill health are untrue, saying he was busy over the Labor Day weekend giving media interviews and visiting his Virginia golf club.
"I was very active over the weekend," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. Asked if he was aware of the reports, he called them "fake."
On July 17, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said Trump was experiencing swelling in his lower legs and bruising on his right hand after photos showed him with swollen ankles and makeup covering part of his hand.
His physician, Sean Barbabella, said in a letter released by the White House that tests confirmed the leg issue was due to "chronic venous insufficiency," a benign and common condition, especially in people over 70.
The doctor said the bruising on Trump's hand was consistent with minor soft tissue irritation from frequent handshaking and aspirin use, which Trump takes as part of a "standard cardiovascular prevention regimen."
Since then, the White House has played down concerns about Trump’s health, saying he is taking the leg issue in stride, without detailing how it is being treated.
Trump, 79, in January became the oldest person to assume the U.S. presidency.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose and Steve Holland in Washington; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Nick Zieminski)
Recent Articles
- Oracle Workforce Shrinks by About 21,000 Employees Amid AI Adoption
- Ohtani’s Baby Boom, Kim’s Birthday Celebration, and World Cup Updates
- Become an AI Bonus Baby—or Just Get Paid Like One
- Ferrari Denies Requiring Luce EV Purchase to Access Limited Edition Models
- SpaceX Turns to Bond Sale to Fatten $100.8 Billion Cash Stash
- Google DeepMind Signs AI Research Deal with Film Studio A24
- China's 618 Shopping Festival Sees Flat E-Commerce Sales from Cautious Shoppers
- Amazon Prime Day to Gauge US Consumer Strain as Focus Shifts to Basics
- China Closing in but US Still Leads in Biotech Innovation
- EV Surge Likely to Cut Oil Demand by Late 2027
