Doubts About Donald Trump's Own Medical Records Emerge

All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor


Saul?

Is that you, Saul Alinsky?

Whatever negative there is about Hillary - lie and claim it is about Trump. :thup:

It's the Communist way.
Wow! Talk about the need for a psych evaluation. You came to the right thread, come on in.
 
Enough deflection

What possible reason would Trump contrive such an obviously bogus medical report?

Doesn't he have any aids who tell him it doesn't look right?

The report is not fake, it's signed by a real doctor. Oopsie...

i will reiterate what juan said....no freaking doctor is answering those questions, dum dum, it's violation of HIPAA....

now read....and learn.

Your Rights Under HIPAA

A other complete tool self identifies.

No, you don't have a right to forge a signature. Nowhere does it say that there. If you inform the doctor that someone may have forged his signature, obviously that will bleed to the public one way or the other.

It would be completely ridiculous for a presidential candidate to even attempt forging someone's signature and then even post the document online. How ignorant can you possible be?
But what if the doctor was paid for his signature?
 
Enough deflection

What possible reason would Trump contrive such an obviously bogus medical report?

Doesn't he have any aids who tell him it doesn't look right?

The report is not fake, it's signed by a real doctor. Oopsie...

i will reiterate what juan said....no freaking doctor is answering those questions, dum dum, it's violation of HIPAA....

now read....and learn.

Your Rights Under HIPAA

A other complete tool self identifies.

No, you don't have a right to forge a signature. Nowhere does it say that there. If you inform the doctor that someone may have forged his signature, obviously that will bleed to the public one way or the other.

It would be completely ridiculous for a presidential candidate to even attempt forging someone's signature and then even post the document online. How ignorant can you possible be?
But what if the doctor was paid for his signature?

I am sure the doctor was paid for his services...
 
trump use to call in to shows back in the 90s & pretend he was donny's publicist 'John Miller'... when everyone could tell it was him. so why would it be so far fetched he would conjure up a bogus medical report, with a typo, a bogus website, using terms like 'test scores' (not test results) & unprofessional language?
 
Enough deflection

What possible reason would Trump contrive such an obviously bogus medical report?

Doesn't he have any aids who tell him it doesn't look right?

The report is not fake, it's signed by a real doctor. Oopsie...
The report is an obvious fake written by Trump
Doctors have been known to accommodate famous patients. Ask Michael Jackson
 
Enough deflection

What possible reason would Trump contrive such an obviously bogus medical report?

Doesn't he have any aids who tell him it doesn't look right?

The report is not fake, it's signed by a real doctor. Oopsie...

i will reiterate what juan said....no freaking doctor is answering those questions, dum dum, it's violation of HIPAA....

now read....and learn.

Your Rights Under HIPAA

A other complete tool self identifies.

No, you don't have a right to forge a signature. Nowhere does it say that there. If you inform the doctor that someone may have forged his signature, obviously that will bleed to the public one way or the other.

It would be completely ridiculous for a presidential candidate to even attempt forging someone's signature and then even post the document online. How ignorant can you possible be?
But what if the doctor was paid for his signature?

I am sure the doctor was paid for his services...

he was paid to keep his mouth shut.
 
All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor
If this actually was true this could be called a HIPPA violation and the doctor could lose his license so I find it to be false.
As far as I know this hasn't been reported. Maybe at some point we'll see an investigation and another reason why Donnie will end up doing time.
 
All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor
If this actually was true this could be called a HIPPA violation and the doctor could lose his license so I find it to be false.

no. the doctor could release records at the request of the candidate. he cannot answer questions about it unless Donald agrees. and he won't. in this particular case, either it looks like Donald wrote it and the doctor signed it, or trump told the doctor what to write. which, i guess if you're paid enough money is a-ok. unethical and not something a reasonable doctor would do, but we're talking about trump people.
 
All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor
If this actually was true this could be called a HIPPA violation and the doctor could lose his license so I find it to be false.

no. the doctor could release records at the request of the candidate. he cannot answer questions about it unless Donald agrees. and he won't. in this particular case, either it looks like Donald wrote it and the doctor signed it, or trump told the doctor what to write. which, i guess if you're paid enough money is a-ok. unethical and not something a reasonable doctor would do, but we're talking about trump people.
The doctor does not seem to be affiliated with any reputable practice that has to maintain its reputation
The guy seems like a glorified Dr Feelgood
 
All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor
If this actually was true this could be called a HIPPA violation and the doctor could lose his license so I find it to be false.

no. the doctor could release records at the request of the candidate. he cannot answer questions about it unless Donald agrees. and he won't. in this particular case, either it looks like Donald wrote it and the doctor signed it, or trump told the doctor what to write. which, i guess if you're paid enough money is a-ok. unethical and not something a reasonable doctor would do, but we're talking about trump people.
The doctor does not seem to be affiliated with any reputable practice that has to maintain its reputation
The guy seems like a glorified Dr Feelgood

You could be right there seems to be a transformation of the pictures available of this man. Also there may be a divorce involved but the record is spotty.
 
All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor
If this actually was true this could be called a HIPPA violation and the doctor could lose his license so I find it to be false.

no. the doctor could release records at the request of the candidate. he cannot answer questions about it unless Donald agrees. and he won't. in this particular case, either it looks like Donald wrote it and the doctor signed it, or trump told the doctor what to write. which, i guess if you're paid enough money is a-ok. unethical and not something a reasonable doctor would do, but we're talking about trump people.

Are you saying that the physician lied in the report?

I highly doubt that....
 
The Bornstein letter is a fraud, probably written by Trump himself, but definitely not by a real physician. So what is Trump hiding?
 
All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor
If this actually was true this could be called a HIPPA violation and the doctor could lose his license so I find it to be false.

no. the doctor could release records at the request of the candidate. he cannot answer questions about it unless Donald agrees. and he won't. in this particular case, either it looks like Donald wrote it and the doctor signed it, or trump told the doctor what to write. which, i guess if you're paid enough money is a-ok. unethical and not something a reasonable doctor would do, but we're talking about trump people.

Are you saying that the physician lied in the report?

I highly doubt that....

why do you doubt that?

if he were a plaintiff's doctor in a personal injury action, you'd have no problem at least questioning the doctor's report and deciding between it and the defendant's doctor's report. in this particular case, the "report" does not sound like one a legitimate doctor would write.

plain and simple. the healthiest president ever in the history of the country? stupidest thing I've ever read in a medical report.
 
All the brouhaha over Hillary Clinton's health has overflowed to a December 2015 letter that Donald Trump used to validate his good health. On closer inspection, Newsweek Magazine has noted quite a few discrepancies and because of that new calls for Donald to present evidence of his health are being called. The letter in question seems at best contrived and at worst fake. More to come on this subject for sure, I can't but wonder why Donald Trump would fake something like this unless there is something in his own record he would fear.

"A fake in the sense that Trump wrote it and his sycophant doc signed it:

On December 4, 2015, the Trump campaign released…something.
donaldtrumpdoctorletter.png

It purports to be a medical letter, but it is one of the most ridiculous documents ever to emerge in any political campaign. First, the letterhead is in the same font as the letter, which appears to have been created using Microsoft Word. The signature from the doctor is several inches past the signature line—the result you might get if the document had been signed as a blank and filled in later. The letterhead includes a Gmail address—something doctors tell me is extremely unusual, since doctors do not want patients contacting them directly by email as a substitute for scheduling an appointment.

There is also a website listed, but if you follow the URL (haroldbornsteinmd.com), it takes you to cdn.freefarcy.com, a blank page that asks if you want to upload an update to a Flash program onto your computer (the domain name,freefarcy.com, is still for sale. No, I can’t explain that.) If you decline, it does so anyway and, based on the response of the security system on my computer, the “program” on the doctor’s supposed website is a virus.

Then, there is the doctor who allegedly signed this document. His name is Harold N. Bornstein, and he is a gastroenterologist. This kind of physician is a specialist who treats the digestive tract. This is not an internist, who is trained specifically in providing full histories and physicals of patients. The letter signed by Dr. Bornstein, who did not return an email from Newsweek seeking comment, says that he has treated Trump since 1980. However, it mentions no history of the gastrointestinal problem that led the Republican candidate for president to seek out his help. In fact, the letter says Trump has had no significant medical problems. So why has he been seeing a gastroenterologist for over 35 years?"

read:Donald Trump tests positive for everything, according to his own doctor
If this actually was true this could be called a HIPPA violation and the doctor could lose his license so I find it to be false.

no. the doctor could release records at the request of the candidate. he cannot answer questions about it unless Donald agrees. and he won't. in this particular case, either it looks like Donald wrote it and the doctor signed it, or trump told the doctor what to write. which, i guess if you're paid enough money is a-ok. unethical and not something a reasonable doctor would do, but we're talking about trump people.

Are you saying that the physician lied in the report?

I highly doubt that....
I seriously doubt if he ever examined Trump
 
The Bornstein letter is a fraud, probably written by Trump himself, but definitely not by a real physician. So what is Trump hiding?
It's not just what is Trump hiding, but why is he so insecure that he has to embellish this ridiculous piece of nonsense
 
All of you LWNJ's need to worry about Hillary's health. She takes Coumadine, a blood thinner, that is usually prescribed for those who have had a stroke. Her family has a history of stroke problems, and strokes are often disabling or fatal.

You moron, coumadin, also known by brand name Warfarin, is a simple anticoagulant. It is often prescribed as a preventative measure when a patient has a known history of a type of irregular heartbeat known as atrial fibrillation. A-fib is frequently discovered during routine check-ups.

I know that since I take it everyday. I had a slight stroke last year and the effect was I have to wear Prism glasses to drive. I have had A-fib for at least 10 years, but my cardiologist put me on Warfarin after I had a stroke to to thin my blood and help prevent having another stroke.

Do you always call posters morons that don't have to google something to know about it?
 

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