This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/15/us/politics/donald-trump-health-dr-oz.html

The article has changed 12 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Donald Trump and Dr. Oz: A Match Made on TV Donald Trump Scraps Plan to Discuss Medical Exam
(about 5 hours later)
When Donald J. Trump sought someone in a public forum to talk about his health, he went with a kindred spirit a physician who is not only Republican, but also has spent the last decade attracting an enormous following on television. Donald J. Trump on Wednesday scrapped his previously announced plan to go over results from his most recent physical examination in a taped appearance with the television celebrity Dr. Mehmet Oz, aides to the Republican presidential nominee said.
That doctor, Mehmet Oz, 56, will tape an episode of his show, “The Dr. Oz Show,” with Mr. Trump on Wednesday, to air the next day. Instead, Mr. Trump, 70, will appear on the “Dr. Oz Show,” but the two men will have a general discussion about health and wellness, not one anchored to the fitness of one of the two major candidates for president.
Mr. Trump, 70, the Republican presidential nominee, is expected to release the results of a recent physical on the show, four days after his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, 68, had to be helped into a van while leaving a Sept. 11 memorial ceremony on Sunday. Her doctor said later that she had pneumonia. Before that announcement, some of Mr. Trump’s supporters had suggested that Mrs. Clinton had more serious health problems. Mr. Trump has, over many months, sought to raise questions about the health of his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, 68, and his supporters have flatly claimed that she is hiding something about her health (her aides have strenuously denied this). But Mr. Trump has answered almost no questions about his own health over the last 15 months of his campaign, except for issuing a highly unusual doctor’s note.
Mr. Trump will also “share his vision for America’s health,” according to a news release from the show about the appearance, declaring boldly that it would be “a no-holds-barred conversation you’ll be talking about.” So the appearance on Dr. Oz’s show, announced on Friday, had been anticipated as a potential breakthrough, as Mr. Trump’s aides had said that over the next few days he would release results from a physical examination taken last week. It was unclear when those results will be available after the change in approach with Dr. Oz.
When Mr. Trump sought someone in a public forum to talk about his health, he went with Dr. Oz, 56, a kindred spirit — a physician who is not only Republican, but also has spent the last decade attracting an enormous following on television.
The original release from the show about Mr. Trump’s appearance said that Mr. Trump would “share his vision for America’s health” with Dr. Oz, declaring boldly that it would be “a no-holds-barred conversation you’ll be talking about.”
In an interview with Fox News, Dr. Oz said he planned to ask “pointed questions,” but he suggested that most holds would, in fact, be barred.In an interview with Fox News, Dr. Oz said he planned to ask “pointed questions,” but he suggested that most holds would, in fact, be barred.
“The metaphor for me is, this is a doctor’s office, the studio,” he said. “So I’m not going to ask him questions he doesn’t want to have answered, and I also don’t want to talk about anybody else.”“The metaphor for me is, this is a doctor’s office, the studio,” he said. “So I’m not going to ask him questions he doesn’t want to have answered, and I also don’t want to talk about anybody else.”
“I do think people want to understand, well, what happens to my health care if Mr. Trump is elected, and more importantly, what kind of role model is he for health in our country?” Dr. Oz added.“I do think people want to understand, well, what happens to my health care if Mr. Trump is elected, and more importantly, what kind of role model is he for health in our country?” Dr. Oz added.
Dr. Oz also said he would ask Mr. Trump, a lover of fast food, “What does he eat — how does he deal with the stress?”Dr. Oz also said he would ask Mr. Trump, a lover of fast food, “What does he eat — how does he deal with the stress?”
It is unclear exactly how much more information about Mr. Trump’s health voters will gain from the appearance, which was scheduled last week. (Dr. Oz said he had also invited Mrs. Clinton to appear on the show.) So far the most the public has to go on is a letter from Dr. Harold Bornstein, a longtime doctor for Mr. Trump, that dripped superlatives about him but offered little by way of specifics. Dr. Oz said he had also invited Mrs. Clinton to appear on the show.
“I want to see if I can make some sense out of that, the letter,” Dr. Oz told Fox News. So far the most the public knows about Mr. Trump’s health is a letter from Dr. Harold Bornstein, a longtime doctor for Mr. Trump, which dripped superlatives about him but offered little by way of specifics.
A cardiothoracic surgeon by training, Dr. Oz has a large female viewership, one reason the Trump campaign chose him as an outlet.A cardiothoracic surgeon by training, Dr. Oz has a large female viewership, one reason the Trump campaign chose him as an outlet.
Famous thanks to Oprah Winfrey, who knighted him “America’s Doctor,” Dr. Oz, who has worked at some of New York’s top hospitals, has a large and devoted fan base. He has been praised for focusing on lifestyle choices and for his ability to explain medical concepts in an easy-to-grasp manner.Famous thanks to Oprah Winfrey, who knighted him “America’s Doctor,” Dr. Oz, who has worked at some of New York’s top hospitals, has a large and devoted fan base. He has been praised for focusing on lifestyle choices and for his ability to explain medical concepts in an easy-to-grasp manner.
He has also been criticized for questionable assertions over the course of his television career, and sometimes speaks in the same type of hyperbole that Mr. Trump employs and that the medical profession generally rejects.He has also been criticized for questionable assertions over the course of his television career, and sometimes speaks in the same type of hyperbole that Mr. Trump employs and that the medical profession generally rejects.
He has branched out into alternative medical practices on his show, written several books, maintained a website and focused on helping people fight cancer and lose weight. He has been modestly involved in local politics in New Jersey and has donated to a number of Republicans’ campaigns over the years, including State Senator Thomas Kean Jr.
He has been modestly involved in local politics in New Jersey and has donated to a number of Republicans over the years, including State Senator Thomas Kean Jr. Dr. Oz told The New York Times in 2010 that he sometimes contemplated running for political office, although he has not yet acted on that impulse. Dr. Oz told The New York Times in 2010 that he sometimes contemplated running for political office, although he has not yet acted on that impulse.
Born to a Turkish father who also practiced medicine, Dr. Oz was part of the surgical team that operated on Frank Torre, the brother of the Yankees’ manager at the time, Joe Torre, at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.
Yet like the man whose health he will discuss on television, Dr. Oz has also been accused of making factually shaky claims, and has promoted products and theories that have been proven faulty.Yet like the man whose health he will discuss on television, Dr. Oz has also been accused of making factually shaky claims, and has promoted products and theories that have been proven faulty.
One of the most famous of those claims came on a 2011 episode of his show in which he said that lab testing he had called for on apple juice samples showed unsafe levels of arsenic, leading to a public panic. The F.D.A. denounced his claim as “irresponsible” and said its testing had demonstrated otherwise.One of the most famous of those claims came on a 2011 episode of his show in which he said that lab testing he had called for on apple juice samples showed unsafe levels of arsenic, leading to a public panic. The F.D.A. denounced his claim as “irresponsible” and said its testing had demonstrated otherwise.
He was also grilled at a Senate hearing in 2014 for featuring weight-loss products on his show that were not proven to work. And a study by a British medical journal found that about half the claims made on his show were not supported by evidence.He was also grilled at a Senate hearing in 2014 for featuring weight-loss products on his show that were not proven to work. And a study by a British medical journal found that about half the claims made on his show were not supported by evidence.
In 2015, a group of doctors called on Columbia University Medical Center to remove Dr. Oz from its faculty because of “an egregious lack of integrity by promoting quack treatments and cures in the interest of personal financial gain.” In particular, the doctors attacked what they called Dr. Oz’s “baseless and relentless opposition to the genetic engineering of food crops.” In 2015, a group of doctors called on Columbia University Medical Center to remove Dr. Oz from its faculty members because of “an egregious lack of integrity by promoting quack treatments and cures in the interest of personal financial gain.” In particular, the doctors attacked what they called Dr. Oz’s “baseless and relentless opposition to the genetic engineering of food crops.”
Dr. Oz defended himself on his show, noting that some of the protesting doctors had ties to a lobbying group for the genetically modified crop industry.Dr. Oz defended himself on his show, noting that some of the protesting doctors had ties to a lobbying group for the genetically modified crop industry.
“We will not be silenced,” he said. “We will not give in.”“We will not be silenced,” he said. “We will not give in.”
John Catsimatidis, the owner of the Gristedes grocery store chain in New York and a friend of both men, said he anticipated that Mr. Trump would be candid.
“Look, they’re both showmen,” Mr. Catsimatidis said. “But at the end of the day, I don’t think Trump is going to take the chance of saying anything that’s not true on his show.”
Mr. Catsimatidis added, “He looks awfully healthy to me.”