Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Thoughts On Presidential Health: More Details Needed; A Woman's Effort To Power Through
The squabble over Hillary Clinton鈥檚 pneumonia underlines the need for full medical disclosure by presidential candidates. Ms. Clinton is 68 and Donald Trump is 70. That鈥檚 not a disqualifying age for someone who seeks the job these days. But the public has a right to know whether they have the stamina and physical fitness to withstand the challenging demands of the office they seek. (9/14)
Replay after replay shows the coughing fit and then the weave-and-bob of her 9/11 episode. Anchors and commentators hit auto-pundit to produce the question du jour: Can this woman handle the presidency? Please. This woman has a bad cold. She needs rest. She鈥檒l be fine. Another question also arose, at least in many women鈥檚 minds: Would anyone ask the same question about a man under similar circumstances? Here鈥檚 the more pertinent question: Why do women feel they can鈥檛 admit to being sick? You know the answer. It鈥檚 because women fear showing any sign of weakness lest others presume the worst 鈥 that she鈥檚 not as good as a man. (Kathleen Parker, 9/13)
Before we delve any further into the coughs heard round the world and the swoon that changed history, some perspective: Running for president isn鈥檛 hard. It鈥檚 brutal. The oddity isn鈥檛 that one of the candidates would succumb to illness and be forced off the trail for a few days. The oddity is that all of the candidates don鈥檛 drop like flies. What we ask of them is less preparation than mortification, physical as well as psychological. (Frank Bruni, 9/14)
It鈥檚 worth noting, as more information comes out and as more is sought, that full disclosure of medical records would almost certainly cause more harm than good. Serving up certain details of any candidate鈥檚 health, and past life, in a voracious social-media environment in which some elements of the media focus on 鈥済otcha!鈥 journalism and opponents leap to make attack ads has the potential to focus disproportionate attention on a candidate鈥檚 health鈥搑ather than a person鈥檚 readiness to govern and her or his positions on major issues. (Drew Altman, 9/13)
As a nation, we are considering two presidential candidates who are 68 and 70 years old for an office that requires at least four years鈥攁nd possibly eight鈥攐f grueling work. Regardless of whom you support, it would be nice to know that the president will survive his or her tenure in office. (Susan Matthews, 9/13)