Incompetence, Malpractice, and Cover-up: Shocking and Unusual Tales of Presidential Doctors
By (Author) Robert W. Winters
Skyhorse Publishing
Sky Pony Press
5th February 2019
United States
General
Non Fiction
Political leaders and leadership
History of medicine
History of science
Biography: historical, political and military
Paperback
288
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
One would presume that Americas presidents have always received the finest medical care available, but that is simply not the case. Incompetence, Malpractice, and Cover up reveals gross incompetence, botched care, and cover-ups surrounding the diagnoses and medical care administered to a dozen of our leaders from George Washington to Grover Cleveland to Ronald Reagan.
A retired General Washington developed an inflammation in his voice box that severely limited air flow to his lungs. Over nine hours, he was subjected to multiple blood lettings, resulting in the loss of half of his total blood volume. A young doctor proposed performing a tracheotomy, which would have provided an unobstructed airway, but was overruled by senior physicians. Washington died of asphyxiation and shock due to blood loss.
Woodrow Wilson was a victim of progressive hardening of the arteries. When the US Senate rejected his proposal for the League of Nations, he embarked on a nationwide trip to influence public opinion. En route, he showed signs of a major stroke, which were ignored by medical staff until he had a major stroke that proved fatal.
Warren G. Hardings doctor did not recognize his patients signs of progressive heart failure, instead believing his stomach pains to be a result of food poisoning from eating spoiled crab meat.
The leaders of the free world put their faith in medical professionals who didnt always provide the life saving care that was expected. Written by a former medical doctor, Incompetence, Malpractice, and Cover up
reveals that questionable prescriptions and inept care, at the very least, resulted in added discomfort, and, at the worst: death.
Robert W. Winters is an experienced medical scientist, doctor, teacher, and writer. He is a graduate of Indiana University and of the Yale School of Medicine. He was a professor of pediatrics at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City. The author resides in Denmark.