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Title: McCain's medical records release, put off twice, won't really be a "release"
Source: Minnesota Monitor
URL Source: http://minnesotamonitor.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=3849
Published: May 4, 2008
Author: Steve Perry
Post Date: 2008-05-04 09:27:56 by Zoroaster
Keywords: None
Views: 197
Comments: 12

McCain's medical records release, put off twice, won't really be a "release" by: Steve Perry Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 3:48:16 PM

It was back in early March when we noted that the McCain campaign was promising the release of their man's medical records "in a month or so." That turned into a pledge they'd be released by April 15. Now the word is May 15.

The delays have occasioned some dark speculations, but McCain's people are pleading logistical difficulties. And that may be so -- because what the McCainiacs have in mind is not really a release of medical records but a carefully managed press event. The plan, detailed by Dan Nowicki in an excellent Arizona Republic article earlier this month, is to convene a gathering where three of McCain's docs will hold forth and a small gaggle of journalists from the Washington press corps will get to peruse the candidate's medical records for a grand total of 90 minutes. Many more journos -- up to 750 -- are expected to participate in a teleconference, but it appears they won't have any direct access to the files themselves.

The dossier that a privileged few reporters will get an hour and a half to digest is likely to be voluminous. When McCain last gave the press a peek at his medical records in 1999 -- under roughly the same terms as he'll show them this time -- the mound of paper comprised over 1,500 pages. And since then, eight years have passed and McCain has undergone a serious bout with stage II melanoma that necessitated extensive surgery.

The question it all begs, obviously, is what a handful of journalists playing against the clock can possibly do with a massive, undigested file of medical data. In the words of local physician and writer Craig Bowron, "I would just be shocked if they'd be able to make any progress in 90 minutes. If they haven't gone through charts before, they won't know what to look for to begin with. Sometimes, for instance, when someone gets transferred from an outside hospital, they'll have a stack of papers that are half an inch to an inch thick. It's a lot less than 2,000 pages, but most of it's just junk. Stuff you don't really need to know. If you don't know what you're looking for and don't have a particular question in mind, I think it would be pointless."

Bowron, an internist by specialty, tells the Monitor he has a hard time seeing any legitimate point to the exercise. "If they're trying to frame a public disclosure about his health issues, why would you make it as hard as possible? I can see if they said, all right, if you really want to know, it's all here. Here's your 2000 pages. Go home. But to give them [a huge file] and only give them 90 minutes, it sounds like a game show to me."

Bowron wonders why McCain doesn't just authorize his doctors to release a comprehensive History and Physical -- a standardized summary report known among physicians as an H&P. "A History & Physical has a section for past medical history and previous surgeries and the medications he's on-all that kind of stuff," notes Bowron. "Typically there's a short social history, and then the first chief complaint, then their past medical history, their past surgical history, their allergies, their habits - do they smoke, do they drink? - then their medications, a family history, their physical exam and lab findings, and at the end, an assessment of plan: Here's their major medical problems, and here's what we're doing about it. And I can tell you that a comprehensive History and Physical is not 2000 pages. So why wouldn't they just have [McCain] authorize his doctors to put together an H&P to give to the press? I don't get the Easter egg hunt. Unless you're trying to be evasive."

Steve Perry :: McCain's medical records release, put off twice, won't really be a "release"

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Tags: politics, John McCain, Candidate medical records, (All Tags) Print Friendly View Send As Email McCain's medical records release, put off twice, won't really be a "release" | 1 comments | Post A Comment

The Guy Is Severely Handicapped, Physically and/or Mentally That's why he collects a disability pension from the Navy.


by: Michael Blaine @ Wed Apr 30, 2008 at 16:18:23 PM CDT [ Reply ]


Poster Comment:

The McSwine creeps will do their best to turn the release into an masochistic orgy of hero worship. The lemmings will eat it up.

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#1. To: Zoroaster (#0)

The McSwine creeps will do their best to turn the release into an masochistic orgy of hero worship. The lemmings will eat it up.

Rest assured anything that is made public will be redacted, sanitized and fumigated to protect the guilty.

Cynicom  posted on  2008-05-04   9:33:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Zoroaster (#0)

I'm not sure we need to know about his medical records, when one look at him tells us all we need to know about his mental health.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2008-05-04   9:38:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Cynicom, Jethro Tull (#1)

The Tim Russet creep, the number-one lemming in America, will probably MC the release ceremony. No doubt, Grahm and Lieberman will be involved, the latter urging McSwine to muke Iran.

Life is a tragedy to those who feel, and a comedy to those who think.

Zoroaster  posted on  2008-05-04   9:46:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Zoroaster (#0)

has any presidential candidate or president ever released their medical records?

christine  posted on  2008-05-04   9:52:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Zoroaster, jethro tull, christine, peppa (#3)

No doubt, Grahm and Lieberman will be involved, the latter urging McSwine to muke Iran.

I would like to see his yearly performance records while in the military. There had to be someone there that told the truth, and paid the price.

I found something rarely ever printed the other day. McKooKs grandfather was an Admiral in WW2 and was cashiered for the running his ships thru a typhoon and having men washed overboard. That was in 1945 and he died in 1946.

Cynicom  posted on  2008-05-04   10:01:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: christine (#4)

has any presidential candidate or president ever released their medical records?

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Campaign08/Campaign08/tb/9186

Presidential Candidates in No Hurry to Release Personal Medical Records By Mark Crane, Contributing Writer, MedPage Today Published: April 21, 2008 Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston.

WASHINGTON, April 21 -- None of the three leading presidential candidates has chosen to be transparent about the state of their own health -- about the likelihood that they would live to serve for the next four years in the White House.

Critical primaries have come and gone for months, but continual requests for the release of medical records and the results of the candidates' most recent physical examinations have been greeted with nothing but promises.

Sen. John McCain says he will issue a report on his own health in about a month. Sen. Barack Obama says the time is not now appropriate to make his health records public. Sen. Hillary Clinton is mute on the issue of her own health.

To be sure, presidential candidates are not required to release detailed medical records, but it has been common practice since 1976 when all hopefuls did so even before the first primary.

McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, is a cancer survivor. He had a melanoma resected in 2000, and says he will release his personal medical records in late May, a campaign spokesman said.

The Obama and Clinton campaigns have declined to say when they will disclose the candidates' medical records.

"We expect to release Sen. McCain's records by the end of May," said spokesman Brian Rogers. "We'll have a conference call with the physicians who've treated him so reporters can ask questions. Folks will be able to view the records also, at least for a time."

It's unlikely that Obama will release his records until he becomes the party's presumptive nominee. Unless Clinton drops out of the race, that won't happen until the Democratic National Convention in August.

"Sen. Obama isn't the party's nominee -- yet," said spokesman Tommy Vietor. "It's premature to do this now. We expect that when he is the nominee, he'll release the appropriate records. No decision has been made on when that will happen and what will be disclosed."

Although Obama looks to be the picture of health, politicos with long memories recall that John F. Kennedy did, too, when he ran for president in 1960. Kennedy, in fact, was being treated secretly for Addison's disease.

The Clinton campaign has declined repeated requests over months to say if or when the New York senator will disclose her medical records.

During McCain's first race for the presidency, the Arizona senator released 1,500 pages of medical and psychiatric records that were part of a U.S. Navy project to study the health of former prisoners of war. McCain was a Navy pilot during the Vietnam War when his plane was shot down. He was captured and held as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, where he was beaten and tortured.

McCain will be 72 in August. He hopes to be the oldest man to be elected to a first term as president. In August 2000, he had a melanoma resected from his left temple. Surgeons removed the surrounding lymph nodes and part of the parotid gland in a 5½-hour operation. There was no spread of the melanoma found and McCain didn't need chemotherapy or radiation, his staff said.

"As part of my misspent youth I spent too much time in the sun and every few months I have to go and have some basal cell removed from my own craggy features," McCain said in 2000.

McCain, who recently told "60 Minutes" that he's completely recovered and in excellent health, has had four melanomas. He often tells audiences that he's "older than dirt" and has "more scars than Frankenstein."

The health status of candidates for national office often becomes a major issue in campaigns. Most recently, Vice President Dick Cheney's multiple heart attacks and recurrent cardiac problems have made front-page news, and provided fodder for late night comedians. Cheney often makes quips about his health status.

Former Sen. Bill Bradley (D-N.J.) faced tough questions when he ran for president in 1999 about whether he'd been completely candid about an irregular heart rhythm.

In 1992, former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas was campaigning for the Democratic presidential nomination. He said the non-Hodgkin's lymphoma he had in the 1980s was completely cured and wouldn't have any effect on his ability to lead the nation. His physicians said he was healthy enough to serve. After Tsongas dropped out of the race, he admitted that his doctors had obscured the truth when they'd declared him free of cancer. His lymphoma returned and Tsongas died in 1997 at age 55.

Historically, candidates have been reluctant to reveal information about their health and have at times deliberately misled the public.

"The candidates are very leery about letting on to any weakness, any flaws, because they are so afraid that it will bring them down," presidential historian Robert Dallek said recently on National Public Radio.

He noted that when Woodrow Wilson ran in 1912, he had already had a series of small strokes. Toward the end of his second term, he had a stroke that left him totally disabled. His wife essentially ran the White House for 18 months.

In 1893, President Grover Cleveland hid his jaw cancer. He had surgery on a yacht floating on New York's East River. People were told he was on a mini- vacation, Dallek said.

Franklin Roosevelt in the 1930s and 1940s did all he could to play down the fact that his legs were paralyzed after a bout with polio, and his hypertension and heart failure were kept secret when he ran in 1944 for a fourth term.

John F. Kennedy suffered from Addison's disease as well as back problems. He regularly took painkillers. He also had recurring prostate inflammation.

In 1972, Missouri Sen. Thomas Eagleton was tapped to be George McGovern's vice- presidential running mate. When it was revealed that Eagleton had been treated for depression with electroshock therapy, he withdrew from the race and was replaced by Sargent Shriver, the first director of the Peace Corps.

Life is a tragedy to those who feel, and a comedy to those who think.

Zoroaster  posted on  2008-05-04   10:13:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Cynicom (#5)

I would like to see his yearly performance records while in the military. There had to be someone there that told the truth, and paid the price.

I found something rarely ever printed the other day. McKooKs grandfather was an Admiral in WW2 and was cashiered for the running his ships thru a typhoon and having men washed overboard. That was in 1945 and he died in 1946.

Cyni,

What we are learning with all three, is that if they are in the 'machine', they are untouchable. NOTHING, ever, matters to partisans. That we want to know the character of these men, is considered smear, with Obama, it is bigoted to even wonder.

Yes, I want to know what these people are made OF. We know Clinton, both of them, we know McCain, and the more info that comes out about his father, and grandfather, his wife, ex-wife, his temper, his LACK OF INTELLECT. All of this matters to some of us.

But, some are blind to see THAT PART. Only if it's Obama, are they in such a rush to defend, they care not to see who the man is. That he is a racist, must be very excititing for many of them.

The status quo people depend on these fools to carry the dirty water, but they hate them the same as the rest of us.

Peppa  posted on  2008-05-04   10:25:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Zoroaster (#6)

In 1972, Missouri Sen. Thomas Eagleton was tapped to be George McGovern's vice- presidential running mate. When it was revealed that Eagleton had been treated for depression with electroshock therapy, he withdrew from the race and was replaced by Sargent Shriver, the first director of the Peace Corps.

The physical ailments don't bother me as much as the mental ailments. Mcinsane has a big mental problem and that really bothers me.

LACUMO  posted on  2008-05-04   10:25:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Zoroaster (#0)

The Guy Is Severely Handicapped, Physically and/or Mentally That's why he collects a disability pension from the Navy.

bump

angle  posted on  2008-05-04   11:00:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Zoroaster (#0)

The delays have occasioned some dark speculations

Odd, because any physical problems related to his war injuries would be good for his campaign. So what else is in that file?

"To destroy a people you must first sever their roots." - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

robin  posted on  2008-05-04   12:27:30 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: LACUMO (#8)

Mad Mac's physical health is a big issue for me, because chances are he'll pick Joe Lieberman (who is an even bigger hypocrite, liar, and scumbag than McCain is himself) as his VP.

Rupert_Pupkin  posted on  2008-05-04   14:12:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Zoroaster (#6)

thank you for the post. even when Hinkley shot Reagan, the public wasn't privy to the extent of his injuries. further, i think there's a pretty good chance his Alzheimer's had begun to manifest. you know his doctors had to know, but that was hushed.

christine  posted on  2008-05-04   14:23:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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