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White House sows confusion about Trump's condition as source tells reporters next 48 hours will be critical

(CNN) President Donald Trump said in a video on Twitter Saturday evening that he's "starting to feel good."

Shortly afterward, his chief of staff acknowledged in an interview with Fox News that the President's oxygen levels had "dropped rapidly" Friday morning, raising more questions about the White House's repeated refusals on Saturday to say whether Trump had needed supplemental oxygen.

Those messages were among the latest in a string of contradictory and often misleading information about Trump's diagnosis with Covid-19 and his condition since being transported to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center Friday evening.

A memo from Trump's physician late Saturday saying Trump has "made substantial progress since diagnosis" but "is not yet out of the woods" followed the doctor's fumbled attempts earlier in the day to reassure the public about Trump's condition, which only created widespread confusion and concerns about transparency, as a source familiar with the President's health told reporters that the next 48 hours would be critical in determining how he fares.

"The President's vitals over the last 24 hours were very concerning and the next 48 hours will be critical in terms of his care. We are still not on a clear path to a full recovery," the source, whom the New York Times and the Associated Press identified as White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, told White House pool reporters after the briefing from his doctors.

The New York Times later reported that Trump was angry at Meadows for those comments, which prompted the President to take to Twitter to try to combat the perception that he was in a perilous position, first with a tweet and then a longer video.

Saturday morning, the President's physician, Navy Cmdr. Dr. Sean Conley, had offered an upbeat assessment of the President's condition stating that he was feeling well, that he had been "fever-free" for 24 hours and that his symptoms -- which included an "extremely mild cough," nasal congestion and fatigue -- "are resolving and improving." Conley was evasive about when and if Trump had received supplemental oxygen, saying, "He is not on oxygen."

But a source close to the White House said Trump has received supplemental oxygen since his illness began. Trump "definitely has had oxygen," the source said, adding that it was on Friday.

The New York Times first reported the oxygen development. CNN reported on Friday the President was having a hard time breathing.

Conley wrote in his Saturday night memo that Trump "remains fever-free and off supplemental oxygen."

"While not yet out of the woods, the team remains cautiously optimistic," the memo says.

"He's made unbelievable improvements from yesterday morning when I know a number of us, the doctor and I were very concerned," Meadows said in the Fox News interview Saturday night, acknowledging that Trump had had a fever and falling oxygen levels.

Trump did not address the conflicting reports about his condition in the video he tweeted Saturday evening, though he did acknowledge that the days ahead would be crucial.

"I just want to tell you that I'm starting to feel good," Trump said. "You don't know over the next period of a few days, I guess that's the real test. So, we'll be seeing what happens over those next couple of days."

He also thanked world leaders and Americans for their support, which have been roundly delivered from both sides of the aisle.

"I most of all appreciate what's been said by the American people, by almost a bipartisan consensus of American people. It's a beautiful thing to see," he said. "And I very much appreciate it and I won't forget it. I promise you that."

Trump in his taped remarks contradicted multiple sources who told CNN that he had been reluctant to go to Walter Reed, fearing that the move would make him appear weak. From the hospital, Trump claimed that he made the decision on his own -- in his desire to lead from "out front."

"I was given that alternative -- stay in the White House, lock yourself in, don't ever leave. Don't even go to the Oval Office. Just stay upstairs and enjoy it. Don't see people, don't talk to people and just be done with it. And I can't do that. I had to be out front and this is America, this is the United States," he said.

Trump did confirm that he "wasn't feeling so well" when he arrived at the hospital, but said, "I feel much better now." He also touted, without specifically naming any treatment, the effect of the drugs he's been administered since becoming ill.

"If you look at the therapeutics, which I'm taking right now, some of them, and others are coming out soon that are looking like, frankly, they're miracles," Trump said. "If you want to know the truth, they are miracles. People criticize me when I say that, but we have things happening that look like they're miracles coming down from God."

Trump's update came hours after a rosy briefing from doctors, which contradicted other emerging information about his condition, the morning after he was transported to Walter Reed, a move that plunged the country into a deepening crisis as the circle of current and former aides to the President testing positive rapidly widened.

Conley said during the briefing -- which occurred shortly before noon Saturday at Walter Reed -- that the President was diagnosed with the coronavirus 72 hours earlier. He later released a statement midday on Saturday saying that he misspoke during the briefing and meant to say it was "Day Three" of Trump's diagnosis -- and that the President was diagnosed Thursday night.

Trump revealed his diagnosis around 1 a.m. ET Friday on Twitter.

He got his first positive coronavirus test result on Thursday after returning from Bedminster, New Jersey, a White House official said Saturday evening. That result was via a rapid test. The President then took a more thorough PCR test that also came back positive, according to the official.

Conley offered scant and insufficient details about the President's vital signs. He acknowledged that the President had a fever at one point, but refused to say what it was. A person familiar with the matter told CNN before the briefing the President was still running a low fever Saturday. Conley also declined to say when Trump had his last negative Covid-19 test or how many people in the President's orbit may have been exposed given that Trump rarely wears a mask.

But one of the most confusing series of answers was about whether the President had received supplemental oxygen. Conley smiled when reporters tried to ask follow-up questions and repeatedly said the President is not currently receiving supplemental oxygen. Another Walter Reed doctor treating the President told reporters at the Saturday news conference that Trump is not having difficulty breathing or walking today, and that Trump told doctors: "I feel like I could walk out of here today."

Midday on Saturday, Trump tweeted thanking doctors, nurses and others at Walter Reed.

"Doctors, Nurses and ALL at the GREAT Walter Reed Medical Center, and others from likewise incredible institutions who have joined them, are AMAZING!!!Tremendous progress has been made over the last 6 months in fighting this PLAGUE," Trump tweeted. "With their help, I am feeling well!"

Though Conley and Trump suggested a sunny prognosis, the treatments administered to the President in the past 24 hours have raised concerns about his condition.

While the President was still at the White House, he was administered the experimental Regeneron antibody cocktail, a promising treatment that has not yet been approved by the Food and Drug Administration that was intended to help boost the President's immune system as he fights the virus.

Adding to the confusion over the President's care, in a memo attempting to clean up his description of the timeline of the President's diagnosis and treatment, Conley referred to the "polyclonal antibody therapy" from Regeneron, which he misspelled as "Regeron." But what Trump actually received was a monoclonal antibody treatment, a spokesperson for Regeneron told CNN.

Once Trump was at Walter Reed, Conley said doctors initiated the antiviral drug remdesivir and that he will receive a five-day course of the drug, which has been shown to shorten recovery time for some coronavirus patients.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said mid-afternoon on Saturday that he spoke to Trump, tweeting that the President "sounds well and says he's feeling good."

"We talked about the people's business -- fighting the pandemic, confirming Judge Barrett, and strengthening the economy for American families," the Kentucky Republican wrote. "Let's keep our President & First Lady in our prayers."

Outside the hospital, a small gathering of the President's supporters, waving American and Trump campaign flags, were joined Saturday afternoon by Gavin McInnes, the co-founder of the far-right group the Proud Boys. Trump infamously told the group to "stand back and stand by" during Tuesday's presidential debate.

There was also at least one protester nearby, who could be heard yelling anti-Trump expletives.

A widening circle

Conley briefed the press about fourteen hours after Trump was taken to Walter Reed. In the hours after Trump revealed his Covid-19 diagnosis early Friday morning, the circle of current and former aides to the President testing positive grew quickly.

By early Saturday, former White House counselor Kellyanne Conway and the President's campaign manager Bill Stepien had both tested positive, which followed the positive diagnoses of two US senators who had attended Trump's Supreme Court nomination announcement last weekend, and Trump senior adviser Hope Hicks on Thursday. A third Republican US senator, who did not attend the nomination event, announced a positive diagnosis later Saturday morning. Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who had helped the President with debate preparations, also announced he had tested positive on Saturday.

It was a remarkably fast escalation of the virus' threat -- which the President has long downplayed -- from an infection that caused him mild symptoms, to a fever to then being airlifted to the hospital, all while spreading throughout the government and his campaign.

A senior administration official told CNN of the outbreak among GOP officials that it "seems highly likely this originated at the SCOTUS announcement last week. It may have come from the Hill. The next major concern will be securing Capitol Hill and protecting lawmakers."

Trump's diagnosis -- followed by his move to Walter Reed, where the White House said he plans to stay and work for "the next few days" -- presented the most serious known health threat to the US presidency since former President Ronald Reagan was non-fatally shot in 1981.

The decision to take Trump to the hospital marked a sharp turn from the statement Conley made early Friday when he first confirmed the Covid-19 diagnosis of Trump and first lady Melania Trump, and said the couple would remain at the White House during their convalescence.

Wearing a suit and mask, Trump, who's 74, gave a low-key wave to the press Friday but took no questions as he walked without assistance across the South Lawn of the White House to Marine One, the helicopter that airlifted him to the hospital Friday.

White House officials underscored that the President has not transferred power to Vice President Mike Pence, as is sometimes customary when a president is ill or scheduled to undergo a procedure that could require anesthesia.

The President "is in charge," a White House communications aide said Friday, and Trump released a short recorded video on Twitter thanking his supporters for their well wishes as he arrived at Walter Reed shortly before 6:30 p.m. ET.

"I'm going to Walter Reed Hospital. I think I'm doing very well," Trump said in the 18-second video, which was notable for its brevity. "We're going to make sure that things work out. The first lady is doing very well. So thank you very much, I appreciate it. I will never forget it. Thank you."

Melania Trump remained at the White House with what the White House physician described as a mild cough and a headache.

A pattern of dismissing the virus

Following the same recklessness the President has shown throughout the pandemic, Trump decided to go to a campaign fundraiser in Bedminster, New Jersey, Thursday evening even though he had learned before the trip that Hicks, one of his senior aides who had traveled with him throughout the week, had tested positive for the virus.

The incubation period for the virus is estimated to be anywhere between five and 14 days, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the agency's guidelines say that anyone exposed to the virus should quarantine for 14 days.

The President traveled earlier in the week to the first presidential debate with Biden, who tested negative on Friday, in addition to his campaign events in Minnesota and New Jersey Wednesday and Friday.

Staff and visitors listen as President Donald J. Trump speaks with Judge Amy Coney Barrett during a ceremony to announce Barrett as his nominee to the Supreme Court in the Rose Garden at the White House on Saturday, Sept 26, 2020 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

There are increasingly troubling signs from the White House events last Saturday when Trump and the first lady hosted a sizable crowd in the Rose Garden as the President announced the nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court. Guests did not socially distance and very few wore masks. At least seven people, including the President and first lady, have tested positive. University of Notre Dame President the Rev. John Jenkins, Conway and Republican Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who were seated relatively close to each other, tested positive.

A third Republican senator, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, on Saturday was reported to have tested positive for coronavirus. He was not at the Supreme Court nomination event because he was quarantining from a prior exposure, during which he twice tested negative for the virus, according to his spokesman.

Lee was seen on video hugging other attendees. Barrett and her husband contracted the virus earlier this summer and recovered, according to three sources familiar with the matter.

Conway, Stepien and Hicks were all involved in the President's preparations for his debate with Joe Biden on Tuesday. Coronavirus symptoms can appear within two to 14 days of exposure, but most often develop with four to five days.

A longstanding credibility gap

The lack of information about the severity of Trump's illness was complicated by the fact that the President and his allies have downplayed the dangers of Covid-19 ever since the virus reached the US.

Trump and members of his administration already faced a major credibility gap because of their extensive history of putting out false or misleading information about a variety of topics over the past four years, including the severity of the pandemic and the risks to public health.

The descriptions of the President's condition shifted throughout the day Friday -- and much of the early information about his well-being was reported by the press first and then confirmed by the White House, underscoring the lack of transparency from this administration.

On Friday morning, as the White House tried to project a business-as-usual demeanor, Meadows described Trump as energetic. But later in the day, Conley, the doctor intimately involved in Trump's care, wrote in a memo that he was "fatigued." And CNN learned from another source that the President had a fever for much of the day.

In the Friday afternoon memo, Conley listed the medications Trump had been given including the antibody cocktail, as well as zinc, vitamin D, famotidine, melatonin and a daily aspirin.

"As of this afternoon the President remains fatigued but in good spirits," his physician wrote. "He's being evaluated by a team of experts, and together we'll be making recommendations to the President and First Lady in regards to next best steps."

Within a few hours, Trump was headed to Walter Reed.

Dr. Leonard Schleifer, the CEO of biotechnology company Regeneron, told CNN's Wolf Blitzer that Trump would have received the experimental antibody treatment that his company manufactures to help boost his immune system, which he said is now in "a race" against the virus.

"If the virus wins you can have dire consequences, obviously, and what our antibodies do is we make it a fair fight," Schleifer said on CNN. "He's in a higher risk group for a variety of reasons, such as being older, and if we give our antibodies, we hope that we will give his immune system enough of a boost so that he can win this and make a complete recovery."

An inevitable outcome

The President's cavalier attitude toward the virus, his decision to keep traveling and holding large rallies, and the fact that he discouraged mask use by most Americans until late this summer made his eventual diagnosis all but inevitable -- given how he has practiced behaviors that his own coronavirus task force has discouraged to the public.

As recently as this week's presidential debate in Ohio, Trump mocked Biden for wearing a mask. In prerecorded remarks for Thursday night's Al Smith charity dinner, the President proclaimed that the "end of the pandemic is in sight."

He has continually undercut and contradicted the advice of his top medical experts as he has flouted public health guidelines by holding events with few masks and people in close proximity to one another, putting his supporters and their contacts at risk.

And as he tries to win reelection, Trump has insisted, in contradiction to the statistics and statements of the nation's top infectious disease experts, that the US is rounding the corner in its fight against Covid-19, stating that it is time for Americans to get back to work and children back to school. He has falsely argued that Biden wants to shut down the country instead of opening it back up, citing that as a reason why Americans should reelect him.

Throughout the spring and summer, both Trump and his aides continually answered questions from the press about why the President refused to wear a mask by insisting that he and the people around him are tested for coronavirus on a daily basis.

But many medical experts have pointed out that testing only offers a snapshot of one's diagnosis at a moment in time and that it may have given White House staffers -- and the President -- a false sense of security as aides continually showed up for work at the White House not wearing masks.

At the debate this week, the President's children arrived wearing masks, but took them off during the event.

On Friday evening, Trump's son Eric made it clear in a tweet that this was no ordinary situation as he called his father a "true warrior" and asked the President's supporters to join him in prayers.

"He will fight through this with the same strength and conviction that he uses to fight for America each and every day. I ask you to join me in praying for his recovery," Eric Trump said on Twitter. "I have never been more proud of someone and what they have had to endure."

This story has been updated with additional developments.

CORRECTION: The graphic in this story has been updated to correctly identify Notre Dame President Rev. John Jenkins.

Jim Acosta, Donald Judd, Jeremy Diamond and Jake Tapper contributed to this report.
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