Trump, 79, gets second medical check-up this year

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

epa12442900 US President Donald Trump waits to welcome President of Finland Alexander Stubb (not pictured) at the White House in Washington, DC USA, 09 October 2025. EPA/WILL OLIVER

US President Donald Trump has maintained a high-tempo schedule and a fondness for red meat.

PHOTO: EPA

Follow topic:

BETHESDA - Donald Trump arrived at a military hospital near Washington on Oct 10 for what aides described as a routine health checkup that will nonetheless draw close scrutiny of the 79-year-old US president’s vitality.

Mr Trump was the oldest person to assume the US presidency when he retook the White House in January, and he is the second oldest person to ever serve as the country’s president.

In office, the Republican has maintained a high-tempo schedule and a fondness for red meat. On Oct 12, he plans to travel to the Middle East

after brokering a Gaza ceasefire deal.

Still, Mr Trump’s health has been a focus of attention a year after

President Joe Biden dropped his 2024 reelection

bid amid questions about his fitness for the job. Mr Trump drew a contrast with Mr Biden during last year’s presidential campaign, portraying himself as younger and fitter.

Mr Trump arrived at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, a hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, that has long served presidents, for what the White House called a routine yearly checkup, as well as a meeting and remarks with troops.

The visit comes just six months after he had an extensive physical examination.

“Physically, I feel very good; mentally, I feel very good,” Mr Trump told reporters on Oct 9, adding that it was a “semi-annual visit” to the doctor. “I like to check. Always early. Always be early.”

A memo released by the White House following the April exam said Mr Trump was 6 feet, 3 inches (190 cm) tall and 224 pounds (102 kg) and had well-controlled high cholesterol. It praised both Mr Trump’s robustness and his golf game.

In July, the White House disclosed that Mr Trump was experiencing swelling in his lower legs and bruising on his right hand, after photographs showed the president with swollen ankles and makeup covering the afflicted part of his hand.

His physician, Dr. Sean Barbabella, said in a letter released by the White House at the time that tests confirmed the leg issue was due to “chronic venous insufficiency,” a benign and common condition, especially in people over 70 years old.

The doctor said the bruising on Mr Trump’s hand was consistent with minor soft tissue irritation from frequent handshaking and aspirin use, which Mr Trump takes as part of a “standard cardiovascular prevention regimen.”

Since then, the White House has played down concerns about Mr Trump’s health, without detailing how the leg issue is being treated.

In 2020, during his first term in office, the White House gave conflicting and opaque assessments of Mr Trump’s health after he contracted Covid-19. REUTERS

See more on