Coronavirus update: Trump returns to White House, CDC says virus can travel more than six feet

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President Donald Trump returned to the White House on Marine One Monday evening, marking the end of a three-day hospital stay at Walter Reed Military Medical Center to treat his COVID-19 infection.

After returning, Trump removed his mask, a point that left health experts bewildered since has not yet been determined if the President is still infectious. In a video shared on Twitter afterwards, Trump reiterated a message from earlier in the day.

Trump announced he would be leaving Walter Reed on Twitter, while also spreading what some experts say is a dangerous public health message.

“Don’t be afraid of Covid. Don’t let it dominate your life. We have developed, under the Trump Administration, some really great drugs & knowledge,” Trump said.

In the video, later, Trump reiterated the line, “don’t let it dominate your lives. Get out there. Be careful. The vaccines are coming, momentarily.”

Dr. Eric Feigl-Ding, a health economist and epidemiologist, said Trump’s message misses the mark for most Americans.

“I would love (Trump’s) quality of health care, getting all this unapproved antibody cocktails around the clock, for only $750 a year (in taxes),” Feigl-Ding said. “Most people don’t have that.”

Trump’s message also reflects poorly on the 200,000 lives lost, and continued case growth — as anticipated— now and in the coming months, he said.

Dr. Peter Hotez, a vaccine expert and Baylor College of Medicine professor shared a similar sentiment to Trump’s tweet, saying it sent a “chilling message.”

“It says he’s learned nothing about the severity of COVID19, how the White House refusal to launch a national response to virus caused so much suffering and death, and how he may have survived his case because of privileged access to biotechnologies denied to others,” Hotez told Yahoo Finance.

White House physician Dr. Sean Conley said Trump’s departure from the hospital was in line with the medical team’s assessment of Trump’s health status, but refrained from sharing additional details, including information about Trump’s CT scan, citing patient privacy, or when his last negative COVID-19 test was.

Conley noted that Trump has been fever-free, without any fever-reducing medication, for 72 hours, and that he could be in the phase of the infection that ensure he does not have traces of “a live virus still present that he could possibly transmit to others”— indicating a later stage of the infection window. If lab results show that to be true, Trump could return to the campaign trail.

“We’re in a bit of uncharted territory when it comes to a patient that received the therapies he has so early in the course,” Conley said, noting he and the team remained cautiously optimistic.