President Donald Trump as soon as once more appeared to wrestle to maintain alert throughout an Oval Office occasion on Thursday, and at the least one medical analyst says he needs to be examined.
During a gathering with pharmaceutical executives to announce a deal on drug pricing, Trump began to look a bit sleepy:
NCS medical analyst Jonathan Reiner, who beforehand served as heart specialist to Vice President Dick Cheney, shared the video on X along with his personal suggestion for the president.
“When a patient tells me that they can’t stay awake in meetings, we do formal sleep testing to look for sleep apnea,” Reiner wrote on X. “I’m sure the White House medical team has done this, but the president continues to struggle with daytime somnolence.”
Indeed, Trump has been frequently seen closing his eyes and appearing to doze throughout public occasions when others are talking, and even reportedly nodded off in court throughout his 2024 criminal trial in New York.
But Reiner mentioned it doesn’t must be that approach.
“This is a common problem,” he wrote. “And there are things that can be done to improve these symptoms.”
The White House has mentioned Trump ― who satirically mocked predecessor Joe Biden as “Sleepy Joe” ― will not be sleeping in these moments.

AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein
“He’s not asleep. He’s got his eyes closed and his head leaned back,” Chief of Staff Susie Wiles told Vanity Fair in December. “And, you know, he’s fine.”
However, he does have various different medical points which were acknowledged. He has chronic venous insufficiency, which includes poor blood circulate from the legs again to the center and results in swollen “cankles,” and bruises on his hand that the White House has mentioned are from aspirin use and shaking fingers.
Other critics have urged Trump has extra well being points that the White House hasn’t acknowledged. Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) earlier this month known as on White House doctor Sean Barbabella to conduct a “comprehensive cognitive assessment” and supply a briefing to Congress.