Serious questions about Covid on Air Force One

President Donald Trump arrives at Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland on October 2, after testing positive for COVID-19.
President Donald Trump arrives at Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland on October 2, after testing positive for COVID-19. Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

President Donald Trump followed in the steps of several of his predecessors when he was admitted to the hospital on Friday, a day after his positive coronavirus test.

Trump arrived Friday afternoon at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, where he will be “working from the presidential offices … for the next few days,” press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said.

It remains extremely rare for a president to stay overnight at a hospital, given the extensive medical facilities available at the White House. But Trump isn’t the first president to do so, for a variety of reasons.

A view of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on October 2, 2020, in Bethesda, Maryland.
A view of Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on October 2, 2020, in Bethesda, Maryland. Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images)

Here are other presidents who have taken hospital stays during their tenures:

Grover Cleveland: In 1893, the country was in an economic recession — and President Grover Cleveland needed mouth surgery. Doctors took a sample of a tumor without revealing Cleveland’s identity, and advised he have it removed. But some worried that news of Cleveland’s surgery would worsen the reeling economy, and staying in a regular hospital without drawing public attention seemed impossible.

So on a friend’s yacht, under the guise of a fishing trip, a team of doctors sworn to secrecy performed the surgery, which ultimately included removing bone from Cleveland’s left jaw. The President received a convincing prosthetic, and reporters were told that he was recovering from a cold and a toothache. Despite a leak to the press about the surgery, the public reportedly accepted the White House’s account that the report was false, and Cleveland served out the rest of his term.

William McKinley: In 1901, President William McKinley was shot by anarchist Leon Czolgosz at the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. He was taken to the hospital on exposition grounds where doctors didn’t arrive for half an hour, according to notes from the surgery.

Despite the two shots fired, McKinley reportedly felt “no particular pain” after receiving morphine for the pain, and later ether as an anesthetic. Despite seemingly improving after the surgery, McKinley’s condition soon began to worsen and he ultimately died eight days after being shot.

Theodore Roosevelt: Three years out of office, Theodore Roosevelt — running for a third term as the “Bull Moose Party” nominee after succeeding McKinley in office — was meeting supporters in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, before a speech when he was shot and wounded by New York saloon keeper John Schrank. Saved in part by his thick speech notes and eyeglasses case blocking the bullet, Roosevelt gave the speech, lasting nearly an hour, in a bloody shirt before agreeing to go to the hospital. He lived the rest of his life with the bullet still inside his body.

Dwight D. Eisenhower: President Dwight Eisenhower experienced a heart attack in September 1955 while in Denver, suffering chest pains and being misdiagnosed with a gastrointestinal problem before being taken to the hospital in a Secret Service car. The White House initially downplayed the severity of the heart attack, and cardiac experts were brought to Denver as the President spent seven weeks in the hospital.

Eisenhower later needed surgery for Crohn’s disease in 1956 and suffered a stroke in 1957. But some scholars have argued that while the 1955 heart attack drew questions about whether he was fit to serve or run for reelection in 1956, the event ultimately factored into motivating him to run for another term.

Ronald Reagan: In 1981, President Ronald Reagan was struck by a ricocheting bullet outside the Hilton Hotel when John Hinckley fired six shots in less than two seconds, hitting press secretary James Brady, Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy and DC Police Officer Thomas Delahanty. Reagan was rushed to George Washington University Hospital in a split-second decision that possibly saved his life — the bullet penetrated within an inch of the President’s heart, filling one lung with blood.

After the attack, Reagan joked with his wife saying he “forgot to duck” and asked the attending doctors if they were Republicans.

source: cnn.com