http://www.salon.com/politics/feature/2001/03/06/cheney/index.html



Doctor: White House is spinning Cheney's condition
There's nothing "precautionary" about Monday's procedure, says a leading
cardiologist.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Jake Tapper
March 6, 2001 | WASHINGTON -- President George W. Bush's reference to Vice
President Dick Cheney's heart catheterization as a "precautionary measure"
was not accurate, a leading cardiologist said Monday afternoon.
"No, you're not going to do [a heart catheterization] on a precautionary
basis," said Dr. Douglas Zipes, president-elect of the American College of
Cardiology. "You do it when you have information about the patient's chest
pain that makes you think that it might lead to a heart attack or an unstable
angina -- which is a precursor to a heart attack. The doctors then take the
patient to the cath lab to prevent a subsequent heart attack." The issue
involves the use of the word "precautionary"; no doctor, Zipes explained,
would use that term to describe an invasive surgical procedure employed to
help prevent a heart attack in a patient.
This is the second time since Nov. 22, when Cheney suffered a mild heart
attack, that Bush and his staff initially downplayed to reporters the
severity of Cheney's condition. On that day, then-Bush press secretary Karen
Hughes characterized Cheney's trip to the hospital as a "precaution" only.
Zipes, both a distinguished professor and chief of cardiology at Indiana
University School of Medicine, agreed with others who were critical at the
time of the Bush campaign's obfuscation of Cheney's November attack, his
fourth.
"Obviously they're very concerned about what kind of spin they put on
things," Zipes said. "The important thing, of course, is that he is being
cared for by good doctors."
Cheney, 60, had his first heart attack when he was just 37. In 1988, Cheney
had quadruple bypass surgery. When Cheney was selected as Bush's vice
presidential nominee, the Bush campaign refused to disclose a list of all the
medications he was taking.
On Monday, the Bush spin operation was similarly unhelpful. The White House
put out a statement saying that the catheterization "is a non-emergency
precautionary procedure. An EKG obtained at the White House this afternoon
was unchanged from one obtained last Thursday."
"There's nothing that's very helpful in what they said," Zipes said, hungry
for more data and again taking issue with any description of a cardiac
catheterization as "precautionary."
"Nobody's got heart data," Zipes said. "So everything is speculative."
The seriousness of Monday's trip to the George Washington University Medical
Center is still unclear. But one hopes that the Bushies will be a little more
honest and forthright than they were last time. Zipes' respect for Cheney's
spin doctors does not quite equal his respect for his heart doctors. "I am
concerned that they weren't forthright about what was going on," he said.
What Cheney suffered on Nov. 22 would not have been considered a heart attack
a year prior, before the American Heart Association changed its
classifications. Still, Dr. Alan Wasserman, president of the George
Washington Medical Faculty Associates, assuredly knew what he was saying
when, right off the bat, he said that neither Cheney's "initial EKG nor his
blood work indicated that he had a heart attack." [Emphasis added.]
Of course, it was Cheney's subsequent EKG and blood work that indicated he
had had a heart attack, which Wasserman clearly knew at the time, since he
referred to the fact that "a second EKG showed minor changes" -- "minor
changes" as in a heart attack.
Bush, too, made this same deceptive assertion about Cheney's condition when
he said that "the initial EKG showed that he had no heart attack."
And, as always, despite the blatant disdain for the American people that Bush
and his misrepresentation -- and Wasserman and his misrepresentation -- would
indicate, the issue was dropped soon enough and media outrage was minimal.
None of this is completely new to the world of politics, of course. President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt hid his polio from the world, and insisted that
photographers never show his crutches or wheelchair. President John F.
Kennedy's White House deceived almost everyone about his Addison's disease,
and it remains to be comprehensively disclosed as to when, exactly, President
Ronald Reagan's Alzheimer's set in.
"If you look historically at these types of situations, the White House
always does damage control," Zipes said. "The glass is always half full
rather than half empty."

Reply via email to