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Tuesday, February 6, 2018

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This is about the physician to the President of the United States. For the book by the former White House physician Connie Mariano, see The White House Doctor.

The Physician to the President (also known colloquially as the White House doctor) is the formal and official title of the physician who is director of the White House Medical Unit, a unit of the White House Military Office responsible for the medical needs of the President of the United States, Vice President, White House staff, and visitors. The Physician to the President is also the Chief White House Physician.


Video Physician to the President



History

Doctors who have treated the President of the United States have had a variety of titles. Dr. Presley Marion Rixey, a Medical Inspector in the United States Navy, was the first individual to serve in a full-time capacity as physician to the President beginning in 1901, although the title "White House Physician" was not used until created by an act of Congress in 1928.


Maps Physician to the President



Organization and role

The White House physician has an office inside the White House. The location of his or her medical unit plays an important role in keeping the President of the United States healthy. He or she also oversees a staff which is typically composed of five military physicians, five nurses, five physician assistants, three medics, three administrators and one IT Manager. The White House Physician is metaphorically the "shadow of the President" because he or she is always close at hand whether the President is at the White House, overseas, on the campaign trail, or aboard presidential plane Air Force One. The Physician to the President protects the president's health and may also perform emergency surgery.

The White House doctor is also responsible for providing comprehensive medical care to the members of the president's immediate family, the Vice President, and the Vice President's family. He or she may also provide medical care and attention to the more than 1.5 million visitors who tour the White House each year, as well as to international dignitaries and other guests of the President.

The medical office of the White House doctor is a "mini urgent-care center" containing a physician's office, private examination rooms, basic medications and medical supplies, and a crash cart for emergency resuscitation. Air Force One is equipped with emergency medical equipment, an operating table, and operating room lights installed at the center of the presidential plane for emergency use by the White House doctor, but does not have an X-ray machine or medical laboratory equipment.

Daniel Ruge, Ronald Reagan's first physician in the White House, resigned after the president's first term and called his job "vastly overrated, boring and not medically challenging." Ruge could not attend most state dinners due to lack of space. He nonetheless had to be ready for emergencies, and usually waited alone in his office wearing a tuxedo. Ruge stated that an advantage, however, was that because of the position's prestige "[a] president's physician can ask for anything, and he will get it. No doctor will refuse a request to consult."

Selection of the physician

The White House Physician is often selected personally by the President, and most White House doctors are active-duty military officers, in part because most civilians would find closing then reopening their private practices difficult.

As of March 2016, Rear Admiral (lower half) Ronny Jackson, MD, USN, is the incumbent White House doctor.


AR6661-E. President John F. Kennedy's Physician Dr. Janet G ...
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White House physicians

Some of the individuals who have acted as White House physicians:

  • 1789: Samuel Bard, MD. Bard was the first physician known to have treated a president when he lanced a boil on George Washington's thigh.
  • 1789 to 1797: James Craig. Craig was a family friend of George Washington's.
  • 1895: Leonard Wood, MD, USA. Wood was not only the White House Physician to President Grover Cleveland in 1895, but also the personal physician of President and Mrs. William McKinley.
  • 1913 to 1921: RADM Cary Travers Grayson, MD, Pharm.D., USN.
  • 1921 to 1923: Charles E. Sawyer, HMD
  • 1923 to 1929: Major James Francis Coupal, MD, MS, USA
  • 1929 to 1933: Commander Joel Thompson Boone, MD, USN
  • 1933 to 1945: VADM Ross T. McIntire, MD, USN
  • 1945 to 1953: Major General Wallace H. Graham, MD, USA
  • 1953 to 1961: Major General Howard McCrum Snyder, MD, USA
  • 1961 to 1963: Janet G. Travell, MD
  • 1963 to 1969: RADM George G. Burkley, MD, USN
  • 1969 to 1974: Major General Walter R. Tkach, MD, USAF
  • 1974 to 1981: RADM William M. Lukash, MD, FACP, FACG, USN
  • 1981 to 1985: Daniel A. Ruge, MD, Ph.D.
  • 1985 to 1986: T. Burton Smith, MD
  • 1986 to 1987: John E. Hutton, Jr., MD
  • 1987 to 1993: Colonel Lawrence C. Mohr, Jr., MD, FACP, FCCP, USA (concurrent from 1989 to 1993 with Burton J. Lee III)
  • 1989 to 1993: Burton J. Lee III, MD (concurrent with Lawrence C. Mohr, Jr.)
  • 1993 to 2001: RDML Eleanor Mariano, MD, USN
  • 2002 to 2009: Brigadier General Richard J. Tubb, USAF
  • 2009 to July 2013: Captain Jeffrey Kuhlman, MD, USN
  • July 2013 to present: RADM Ronny Jackson, MD, USN

President Trump's physician bleeds maroon | Local News | theeagle.com
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Footnotes

Notes
Citations

Alberto Sola - White House - President Bush - Clear Sky Recovery
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Bibliography

  • Deppisch, Ludwig M. The White House Physician: A History From Washington to George W. Bush. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2007.
  • Evans, Hugh E. The Hidden Campaign: FDR's Health and the 1944 Election. Armonk, N.Y.: Sharpe, 2002.
  • Ferrell, Robert H. The Dying President: Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1944-1945. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 1998.
  • Ferrell, Robert H. Ill-Advised: Presidential Health and Public Trust. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 1992.
  • Joynt, Robert J. and Toole, James F. Presidential Disability: Papers and Discussions on Inability and Disability Among U. S. Presidents. Woodbridge, Suffolk, U.K.: University of Rochester Press, 2001.
  • Levin, Phyllis Lee. Edith and Woodrow: The Wilson White House. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2001.
  • McCullough, David. Truman. New York: Simon and Schuster, 2003.
  • Smith, Jean Edward. Eisenhower: In War and Peace. New York: Random House, 2012.
  • Steely, Skipper. Pearl Harbor Countdown: Admiral James O. Richardson. Gretna, La.: Pelican Publishing, 2008
  • Ullman, Dana. The Homeopathic Revolution: Why Famous People and Cultural Heroes Choose Homeopathy. Berkeley, Calif.: North Atlantic Books, 2007.

Source of article : Wikipedia