• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

Exclusive — Sen. Tom Cotton Targets Cybersecurity Risks of Medical Devices Made in China

May 27, 2026

Boomer Esiason Blasts Abdul Carter for Criticism About Jaxson Dart’s Appearance with Trump

May 27, 2026

I Hope Trump, Iran Negotiations Break Down

May 27, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Wednesday, May 27
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Hasan Piker Admits Tech Mogul With Ties To China Is Funding Political Movements In US

    May 27, 2026

    The Texas GOP finally turned on Cornyn

    May 27, 2026

    Texas Voters Show Notorious Trump-Heckling Democrat The Door In Key Primary

    May 27, 2026

    ‘Pretty damn bullish’: Democrats have high hopes for Paxton-Talarico showdown

    May 27, 2026

    Mayes Middleton Defeats Chip Roy In Texas Attorney General Primary Runoff

    May 27, 2026
  • Health

    Trump’s medical exam, longevity, urgent care: Morning Rounds

    May 27, 2026

    Can You Have Outpatient Brain Surgery In An Ambulatory Surgery Center?

    May 27, 2026

    Is death optional? Inside the big business of the longevity movement

    May 27, 2026

    AI Being Used For Therapy And Companionship In Youth And Adults

    May 26, 2026

    PEPFAR, Ebola outbreak, FDA, CDC: Morning Rounds

    May 26, 2026
  • World

    I Hope Trump, Iran Negotiations Break Down

    May 27, 2026

    Mike Johnson Mocked Over Claim That Trump Is The ‘ONLY One’ To Get Iran To Negotiating Table

    May 27, 2026

    Iran’s Enriched Uranium to Be ‘Immediately Turned Over’ to U.S.

    May 27, 2026

    Thomas Massie Says Breaking From Trump Was ‘Absolutely Worth It’

    May 27, 2026

    Israel Honors U.S. Memorial Day With Message of Solidarity

    May 27, 2026
  • Business

    US Voters’ Confidence In Economy Nosedives To Nearly 4-Year Low

    May 22, 2026

    Elon Musk On Track To Be World’s First Trillionaire After Latest Move

    May 21, 2026

    Major Cruise Lines Are On The Hook After SCOTUS Rules They Illegally Used Cuban Port Seized Under Castro

    May 21, 2026

    James Murdoch Reportedly Acquires Vox Website, Podcasts, And New York Magazine For $300 Million

    May 20, 2026

    EXCLUSIVE: Republican AG Takes On Big Business Over Covert DEI Policies

    May 20, 2026
  • Finance

    Westpac fined A$26m over hardship delays

    May 27, 2026

    Taiwan chip stocks climb after Nvidia announces $150 billion spending

    May 27, 2026

    Canaccord Raises its Price Target on Block (XYZ)

    May 27, 2026

    European companies double down on China manufacturing despite EU de-risking push

    May 27, 2026

    Applied Materials, Inc. (AMAT) Sees Quarterly Revenue Exceeding Forecasts

    May 27, 2026
  • Tech

    Exclusive — Sen. Tom Cotton Targets Cybersecurity Risks of Medical Devices Made in China

    May 27, 2026

    Pentagon Clashes with Elon Musk’s SpaceX over Starlink Pricing for Drones Used in Iran Conflict

    May 27, 2026

    Ferrari Shares Drop 5% After Former Boss Slams Electric Vehicle

    May 26, 2026

    Media Research Center Sounds Alarm About Leftist Bias in AI Chatbots

    May 26, 2026

    First AI Feature Film Cost $500K… And It Is the Future

    May 26, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Health»Trump’s medical exam, longevity, urgent care: Morning Rounds
Health

Trump’s medical exam, longevity, urgent care: Morning Rounds

May 27, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Trump physical: What the public finds out is up to him
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Get your daily dose of health and medicine every weekday with STAT’s free newsletter Morning Rounds. Sign up here.

Good morning. You know that one Emily Dickinson poem? “Because I could not stop for Death – / He kindly stopped for me – / The Carriage held but just Ourselves – / And Immortality.” I’d love to hear a longevity enthusiast’s close reading. In the meantime, scroll down for a great story from Sarah Todd on the movement’s latest death-defying initiatives.

Trump says latest medical exam went ‘PERFECTLY’

President Trump had another medical exam yesterday, for what the White House described as preventive medical and dental checkups. It’s the fourth publicly disclosed exam he’s had since returning to office last year.

On social media, Trump said that “everything checked out PERFECTLY” at what he called his “6 month physical.” Read more from the AP.

“The bigger issue today isn’t speculation. The real question is transparency,” physician Uché Blackstock posted on X regarding the exam. “The public deserves clear, timely, medically grounded information without political spin, stigma, or ageism.”

Urgent care usage across the U.S. 

In 2024, about 28% of people visited an urgent care center at least once, while 19% went to a retail health clinic (like the MinuteClinic at CVS, for example), according to new CDC data. Adults 65 and older were less likely to go to urgent care than younger adults. A previous iteration of this data analysis from the National Center for Health Statistics included a breakdown by race, finding that Black and Hispanic adults were less likely than their white peers to visit urgent care or a retail clinic. The latest analysis did not include racial differences.

See also  Exclusive — Sen. Tom Cotton Targets Cybersecurity Risks of Medical Devices Made in China

While urgent care centers have existed since the 1970s, the number across the U.S. has doubled over the last decade from 7,000 to more than 14,000. “Urgent care centers have become the reliever airport for our broken system,” Franz Ritucci, a physician and president of the American Academy of Urgent Care Medicine, told WHYY last fall.

Inside the conference where death is (theoretically) optional

Laure Andrillon for STAT

The longevity conference that Vitalist Bay launched last year brings together founders, investors, biohackers, researchers, and those with a general interest in discussing how to forestall — and eventually beat — death. STAT’s Sarah Todd attended the meeting this year and today published a story on the latest death-defying science and theories.

The piece is a little goofy but also haunting. Here are just a few details that I’ll think about for a long time:

  • A photo that one attendee showed Sarah, featuring his children holding up a sign that read “Stop aging, save my parents (Mom first).”
  • The entire concept of bodyoids. Imagine a sort of headless sac of organs to replace an aging person’s failing heart and kidneys. (“What if we could obtain a supply of human bodies in an ethical way?” postdoc Carlston Charlesworth said. “There’s logically no reason why it’s wrong.”)
  • The business model for health testing as outlined by one venture capitalist: Be sure to give people at least one good result, then sell them on subscriptions, interventions, and coaching to improve the other metrics.

Read more from Sarah on how longevity turned from a movement into an industry. Bonus: She also asked 45 conference speakers and attendees how long they predict they’ll live. The distribution on that bar graph is really something.

See also  Living in a disadvantaged neighborhood affects food choices, weight gain and the microstructure of the brain: Study

Understanding trends among undocumented patients

On President Trump’s first day back in the White House, the Department of Homeland Security issued a memo rescinding a policy that prevented immigration officers from doing searches, making arrests, or other enforcement actions in “protected areas,” including schools, churches, and hospitals. In the six months after that directive, emergency room visits in one Massachusetts hospital system declined about 11% among undocumented immigrants, according to a study published yesterday in JAMA Network Open.

Or at least the researchers believe that visits among undocumented immigrants declined. The health system does not track patients’ documentation status, so the analysis was done using two proxies: an emergency insurance product that’s available to undocumented immigrants in the state (or missing insurance information), and the patients’ preferred language. There are limitations to using the insurance product, especially if attempted in other states with higher rates of uninsured people. But overall, preferred language did not consistently identify the same declines in ER visits, meaning that it may not be a reliable proxy for research on this group moving forward.

It’s the end of the world science as we know it

And neuroscientist Jonathan Jackson feels fine! Really.

Last month, a massive study of nearly 4,000 social-science papers found that results could be replicated for only about half of them. It wasn’t exactly surprising, Jackson writes, but it was alarming — especially considering how American science had been shattered over the last year by the Trump administration’s policies and funding cuts. Despite the very real despair, Jackson argues in a new First Opinion essay that academics and scientists need to stop mourning and start taking action.

See also  16-Year-Old Loses Left Testicle Into Body While Picking Up Golf Ball

“We’ve been so busy feeling righteous that we forgot to be resourceful,” he writes. Read more about what could come next.

What we’re reading

care Exam Longevity Medical Morning Rounds Trumps urgent
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Exclusive — Sen. Tom Cotton Targets Cybersecurity Risks of Medical Devices Made in China

May 27, 2026

Can You Have Outpatient Brain Surgery In An Ambulatory Surgery Center?

May 27, 2026

Is death optional? Inside the big business of the longevity movement

May 27, 2026

Republicans Who Have Drawn A Hard Line On Iran Pan Trump’s Emerging Proposal To End The War

May 27, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Transgender Flight Attendant Who Starred in United Airlines Commercial Dead at 25 in Apparent Suicide

March 30, 2023

‘Parents Loved It’: DeSantis Hammers Republicans Who Criticized His Battle With Disney

June 4, 2023

Disney+ Cancels Woke ‘Doogie Howser’ Reboot, Won’t Air Completed ‘Spiderwick’ and ‘20,000 Leagues’ Shows

August 29, 2023

Germany’s Friedrich Merz Calls for ‘Associate’ E.U. Membership for Ukraine

May 23, 2026
Don't Miss

Exclusive — Sen. Tom Cotton Targets Cybersecurity Risks of Medical Devices Made in China

Tech May 27, 2026

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) voiced concerns to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Tuesday…

Boomer Esiason Blasts Abdul Carter for Criticism About Jaxson Dart’s Appearance with Trump

May 27, 2026

I Hope Trump, Iran Negotiations Break Down

May 27, 2026

Trump’s medical exam, longevity, urgent care: Morning Rounds

May 27, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,369)
  • Entertainment (4,737)
  • Finance (3,534)
  • Health (2,128)
  • Lifestyle (1,886)
  • Politics (3,357)
  • Sports (4,301)
  • Tech (2,163)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (4,544)
Our Picks

MAGA Is Destroying Itself As War Breaks Out Between Laura Loomer And Marjorie Taylor Greene

April 8, 2023

NASA Says No Proof Aliens Exist But Says “No Reason To Conclude”

September 15, 2023

The Key to Living With Purpose in a Distracted World

July 19, 2024
Popular Posts

Exclusive — Sen. Tom Cotton Targets Cybersecurity Risks of Medical Devices Made in China

May 27, 2026

Boomer Esiason Blasts Abdul Carter for Criticism About Jaxson Dart’s Appearance with Trump

May 27, 2026

I Hope Trump, Iran Negotiations Break Down

May 27, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.