A striking comment from television personality turned health official Dr. Mehmet Oz has added fuel to speculation about President Donald Trump’s health, as the 79-year-old commander in chief completed eight consecutive days without a public event, ending June 3, 2026.
Filling in for press secretary Karoline Leavitt at the White House briefing, Oz faced repeated questions about why a president supposedly in “excellent health” keeps making trips to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. After dismissing the first inquiry by calling the appointments “routine,” Oz provided an unusual second response.
“I think he likes the results. He does really well. He aces the test every single day. I do actually believe he’s curious to make sure everything is going in the right direction,” Oz told reporters.
Journalist Aaron Rupar first flagged the disappearance publicly on Twitter, noting Trump had not been seen at any public engagement since a Cabinet meeting on May 27. His only appearances since then have been a pre-taped television interview and a brief June 3 Oval Office session where he signed two executive orders on customs enforcement and federal employment protections and answered questions about Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool renovations.
The extended absence comes just 10 days before Trump’s 80th birthday on June 14. Despite staying off-camera, the president has continued posting prolifically on Truth Social. Pool reporters did observe Trump traveling to and from his golf course in Sterling, Virginia on May 30 and 31, and the White House dismissed stroke speculation as “categorically false and slanderous,” though fact-checkers at Lead Stories and Snopes noted the absence of scheduled public events remained unusual.
Repeated Hospital Visits Raise Questions
On May 26, one day before that Cabinet meeting, Trump spent hours at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center for his third visit to the facility in a year. The White House took longer than usual to release the results of that check-up, finally publishing the report on May 29.
Navy Capt. Sean Barbabella, Trump’s physician, concluded in a memo that the president “remains in excellent health” and continues to demonstrate strong cardiac, pulmonary, neurological and overall physical function. Trump declared on Truth Social that “everything checked out PERFECTLY.”
The report placed Trump’s weight at 238 pounds — a 14-pound gain since his April 2025 physical, pushing his body mass index to 29.7, just below the clinical obesity threshold of 30. Dr. Barbabella included guidance on diet, increased physical activity, and continued weight loss.
Several prominent physicians have publicly questioned the assessment. Texas vascular surgeon Dr. William Shutze told The Wall Street Journal that the findings seemed “almost too good to be true for somebody of his age,” describing the document as “a filtered narrative.”
CNN medical analyst Dr. Jonathan Reiner, who previously served as cardiologist to former Vice President Dick Cheney, focused on the fact that Trump received another coronary artery CT scan despite having been scanned in October 2025. “We don’t typically scan patients six months later unless we are concerned about a finding on the initial scan. What prompted the repeat CT?” Reiner wrote on X.
Physical Symptoms Continue to Draw Attention
Trump, the oldest person ever to assume the U.S. presidency, has been spotted with persistent bruising on the back of his right hand, sometimes only partially concealed with makeup, along with noticeable swelling around his ankles. He has repeatedly attempted to hide both.
During the June 3 Oval Office appearance, social media users and commentators noted Trump appeared to be concealing the bruised hand by covering it with his other hand, described his voice as noticeably weakened, and in some cases claimed he appeared to be losing consciousness briefly — claims the White House did not address directly.
In July 2025, the White House disclosed that Trump had been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, a fairly common condition in older adults in which veins in the legs struggle to carry blood back to the heart, causing it to pool in the lower legs. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt has previously attributed the hand bruising to “frequent handshaking and the use of aspirin” — specifically the roughly 325 milligrams Trump takes daily for cardiac prevention.
Trump has disappeared from public view for extended periods on a near-monthly cadence since October 2025, a pattern that has coincided with his Walter Reed visits and a couple of dental appointments in Florida — even though a dentist works inside the White House itself.
Past Episodes and Incomplete Disclosures
The October 2025 imaging episode also raised eyebrows at the time. Following that Walter Reed visit, Trump told reporters he had undergone an MRI; the procedure was eventually revealed to have been a CT scan of his heart and abdomen.
Similar questions arose on September 3, 2025, at a Space Command headquarters announcement — his first public event in a week. Fox News reporter Peter Doocy asked the president directly how he discovered over the weekend that he was supposedly “dead.” Trump answered “No,” and called the rumors “fake news,” noting that he “was very active over the weekend” and had posted what he described as “long Truths” and “pretty poignant Truths,” including one declaring he had “NEVER FELT BETTER IN MY LIFE.”
That weekend, Trump was photographed at his golf course, just as he was during the latest absence.
Trump’s history of selective disclosure looms over the current moment. In 2015, his campaign released a now-infamous letter from his doctor proclaiming his “physical strength and stamina are extraordinary” and that he would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency.” In 2020, the White House withheld key details about his COVID-19 hospitalization, including a concerning drop in his blood oxygen levels, with the public only later learning he had been far sicker than officials initially let on.
White House spokesperson Davis Ingle has waved off the latest round of speculation, saying in a recent statement that Trump “is the sharpest and most accessible president in American history” and “remains in excellent health.” Vice President J.D. Vance has not publicly addressed the absence.
As of June 5, the only thing on Trump’s confirmed schedule is a pre-taped television interview — and a growing list of unanswered questions about why the most publicly visible president in modern memory keeps quietly vanishing.

