Trump Declares Himself 'Immune' From Coronavirus

"I feel fantastically, I really feel good," the US president told Fox News.
Open Image Modal
President Donald Trump removes his face mask to speak to a crowd of supporters, days after leaving hospital where he was being treated for Covid-19.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Donald Trump has declared himself “immune” from the coronavirus, nearly one week after leaving Walter Reed hospital where he was being treated for Covid-19.

“It seems like I’m immune,” the US president said in an interview with Fox News.

“It looks like I’m immune for, I don’t know, maybe a long time or maybe a short time. It could be a lifetime. Nobody really knows. But I’m immune. So the president is in very good shape.”

He added: “I have to tell you, I feel fantastically. I really feel good.

“And I even feel good by the fact that, you know, the word immunity means something — having really a protective glow means something.

“I think it’s very important to have that, to have that is a very important thing.”

 Though scientists believe patients who recover from Covid-19 have some immunity, how much and for how long has not yet been determined.

Recorded reinfections have been rare so far, but very few diseases leave people completely immune for life, reported The Associated Press.

Trump’s comments came after his physician, Sean Conley, released a brief statement declaring Trump no longer poses a risk of transmitting the coronavirus to others.

Conley, however, did not state in his memo whether Trump has tested negative for the virus. 

“By currently recognised standards,” Trump is “no longer considered a transmission risk to others,” noted the unsigned statement by White House physician Dr. Sean Conley.

He added the “assortment of advanced diagnostic tests obtained reveal there is no longer evidence of actively replicating virus”.

Melissa Miller, a clinical microbiologist at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine, told the New York Times that no test can definitively show if a person at the end of a coronavirus infection is still contagious and poses a risk to others.

The White House has been extraordinarily tight-lipped about the exact nature of Trump’s illness and recovery.

It remains unclear when the president contracted coronavirus. The White House has refused to reveal when Trump last tested negative.

Trump plans to resume his campaign rallies in the coming days.