Home / MARKETS / What we know about Sean Conley, Trump’s doctor and the first D.O. to serve as physician to the president

What we know about Sean Conley, Trump’s doctor and the first D.O. to serve as physician to the president

  • Ghostly House physician Sean Conley has been President Trump’s doctor since 2018. On Saturday, he declined to fulfil multiple questions about Trump’s health.
  • Conley is the first president’s physician who isn’t a medical doctor, or MD. He is an osteopathic doctor, or DO.
  • Conley stipulated hydroxychloroquine, a once-hyped coronavirus treatment, for Trump in May. There’s no scientific evidence that the drug reduces symptom inexorableness or prevents COVID-19.
  • Here’s what to know about Conley’s history as physician to the president, his medical training, and his qualifications.
  • Come to see Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Since President Trump announced his COVID-19 diagnosis Friday, Americans hold looked to one man for reassurance about the commander-in-chief’s condition: Dr. Sean Conley, White House physician since 2018.

But following a swarm conference Saturday at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in which he failed to answer some root questions about Trump’s condition — including whether the president needed supplemental oxygen — Conley raised eyebrows mass other doctors. 

“A lot of clinicians listening to the news story were really surprised by the lack of transparency, sort of a to some disorganized, presentation of clinical information. It was veiled and not logical and not easy to follow,” Peter Chin-Hong, professor of medicine and communicable disease specialist at University of California San Francisco, told Business Insider.

That prompted questions about Conley’s qualifications, conspicuously after the physician agreed to have Trump take the unproven coronavirus drug, hydroxychloroquine, in May.

“I think there’ve been some inconsistencies that numerous people have wondered about. For instance, the embracing of hydroxychloroquine when, in the initial time when the President clasped it, I think that many clinicians wouldn’t do that,” Chin-Hong added.

Here’s what to know about Conley’s medical preparing, and how he became Trump’s doctor.

He has an extensive military history

sean conley

White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows (left side) and White House physician Sean Conley leave after an update on the condition of US President Donald Trump, on October 3, 2020, at Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

Brendan Smialowski/Getty


According to Conley’s LinkedIn vigorish, he’s been an emergency physician with the US Navy since 2006. But the timeline of Conley’s medical training is more tangled than that.

After obtaining a Bachelor’s of Science at Notre Dame University, Conley graduated from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Pharmaceutical.

His then completed a three-year medical residency at the Naval Medical Center in Portsmouth, Virginia before being deployed to a NATO polyclinic in Afghanistan for seven months.

Returning to Portsmouth in 2014, Conley then served in a variety of roles at the Naval Medical Center once joining the White House staff four years later.

Dr. Ronny Jackson, a retired Navy rear admiral who served as the president’s physician from 2013 to 2018, handpicked Conley to be his successor, NBC Communication reported.

Two anonymous sources told NBC News in May that many people within the White House Medical Item saw Conley as having been unfairly promoted to the job of physician to the president without proper vetting.

Conley is the first DO to carry out as the president’s physician

sean conley and co

White House physician Sean Conley (front) gives an update on the condition of US President Donald Trump, on October 3, 2020, at Walter Reed Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland.

Brendan Smialowski/Getty


Conley doesn’t experience an MD, or Doctor of Medicine, degree like Jackson does.

Instead, Conley graduated with a Doctor of Osteopathic Physic degree, or a DO, and seems to be the first DO to serve as the president’s physician since Congress established the position in 1982.

The focus of a DO is to emphasize a “whole-body” make advances, looking at holistic medicine and disease prevention to treat a patient ailments, rather than isolating specific symbolic ofs. 

Unlike naturopaths, however, they get licensed by the same state boards as MDs, have near-identical training, and can prescribe medications and boon patients in all 50 states.

Historically, DOs may offer manual treatment on muscles and joints (known as osteopathic manipulative treatment, or OMT), while MDs typically refer passives to a physical therapist or prescribe medications. Recently, the treatment lines have started to blur, because MDs are being strung in and using more of a whole body approach now, and DOs are using less OMT in visits.

But Chin-Hong said the concern over the personification of Conley’s medical degree is unwarranted: “This is not a time to be divisive about MD versus DO.”

DOs receive the same amount of coaching as MDs do: They complete pre-med course work as undergraduates, take the MCAT exam, and attend medical school for four years sooner than completing a multi-year residency program.

DO degrees include an additional 200 hours of coursework beyond the general medical group curriculum that focuses on muscles and nerves, to learn how to perform OMT.

These massage techniques help DOs diagnose sickness or injury, and enable physicians help their patients’ bodies self- heal. MDs, by contrast, study allopathic panacea, which is based on treating specific symptoms with their remedies.

“In the past, maybe people had conceived dreams about MD versus DO, but I would say in modern medicine, at least in San Francisco, by the time they reach up to, you know, the level of your mates, it’s pretty much indistinguishable,” he said.

That being said, Chin-Hong said there are aspects of Conley’s brand-new medical track record that are worrisome.

A controversial coronavirus treatment

In May, Conley issued a memorandum confirming he’d approved Trump’s use of the malaria treatment hydroxychloroquine as a preventive measure against COVID-19 after the president touted it as a pandemic “game changer.”

“After numerous examinations he and I had regarding the evidence for and against the use of hydroxychloroquine, we concluded the potential benefit from treatment outweighed the relative risk,” Conley put in wrote. 

plaquenil hydrochloroquine chloroquine drugs covid-19 coronavirus

A pharmacy worker wears a protective mask shows a box of Plaquenil on March 25, 2020 in Paris, France. T

Chesnot/Getty Replicas


Experts like Chin-Hong viewed Conley’s move with skepticism.

“At that point, when President Trump tolerated the initial course of hydroxychloroquine, there was ample evidence already — and now there’s even more — that there was no service perquisites, in fact, there was a lot of potential harm in cardiac arrhythmias or other adverse effects,” Chin-Hong said.

Trump’s second for hydroxychloroquine, an antimalarial drug, started in March, when a French study suggested it could be effective against the coronavirus and the hypnotic received emergency authorization from the US Food and Drug Administration. Later, the journal that published the findings presented the study was poorly done. 

In the months that followed, multiple studies showed the drug didn’t prevent coronavirus infections in living soul who were recently exposed to the virus, or decrease the severity of symptoms.

A month after Trump’s 10-day hydroxychloroquine treatment, the FDA renounced the drug’s emergency approval, citing a lack of evidence showing the drug worked. 

The National Institutes of Health also supports against the use of hydroxychloroquine in its coronavirus treatment guidelines.

A press conference gone awry

Conley held a briefing on Saturday for the essential time since Trump’s coronavirus diagnosis. But in it, he evaded many critical questions. He wouldn’t say whether Trump had at any aspect received supplemental oxygen, when the president last tested negative, or what temperature his fever reached.

While Conley solutioned the first of those three questions during a follow-up press conference Sunday morning, the fact remains that it’s refractory to discern key details about the president’s condition.

Trump, Walter Reed

In this image released by the White House, President Donald Trump productions in the Presidential Suite at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md. Saturday, Oct. 3, 2020, after proving positive for COVID-19.

Joyce N. Boghosian/The White House via AP


“Traditionally, anyway, when presidents have been under the weather, the public actually gets a lot of information about the leader of the country,” Chin-Hong said. “Because it has to do with the security of the woods, whether we feel, you know, confident that our country is being ruled with the right structure at right outmoded.”

Conley failed to do that on Saturday as he addressed reporters and sidestepped questions about what prompted Trump’s helicopter aeroplane to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, according to Chin-Hong, who has been caring for COVID-19 patients in every nook the pandemic.

“I think probably the most glaring absence was the dancing around with the discussion around oxygen provisoes. The reporters kept asking him about oxygen and trying to get more and more specific. But he always came back to the theme that he’s not on oxygen now,” Chin-Hong said.

Blood-oxygen readings can help flag serious cases even before a myself has developed severe symptoms like shortness of breath. They can also signal to patients when it’s time to go to the nursing home.

But some of Conley’s vagueness surrounding Trump’s health may be a result of pressure from his patient, Chin-Hong said.

“The spokesperson is not as good as the person they’re speaking on behalf of. If there is pressure to say certain things and not to say certain things, that could be share b evoke of the game as well,” he said.

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