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  1. Medical Experts Call for Donald Trump Removal From Office.


    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency…

    Article republished by Jerry Alatalo via PeaceandHealthBlog.com | May 6, 2026

    [Editor’s note: I have nothing more to add to the profound, sane, focused warning message from this group of medical experts. Peace.]

    ***

    Medical Experts Declare President Trump Too Unstable to Remain in Office, Cite Nuclear Weapons Risks

    May 5, 2026

    tags: medicine, nuclear weapons, Trump, USA

    by IPPNW

    On April 30, 2026, a group of 36 leading physicians and other doctors with expertise in mental health issued a statement calling for President Donald J. Trump’s immediate, lawful removal from office for medical reasons. His mental instability, coupled with his sole, unchecked authority to launch nuclear weapons, makes him a clear and present danger to the safety of all Americans, they declared. The U.S. Senate offices of Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Jack Reed (D-RI) entered the experts’ statement into the Congressional Record, Vol. 172, No. 76. 

    Read the statement in full here and below.

    Medical Concerns about President Donald J. Trump and His Fitness for Office

    The following is not a political statement. It is a medical one, made by individuals holding both conservative and liberal ideologies, identifying as both Republicans and Democrats, from different backgrounds, races, ethnicities, and religions. 

    We are a group of neurologists, forensic psychiatrists, general psychiatrists, and other physicians, along with other mental health professionals, experienced in the diagnosis of cognitive disorders and in evaluating dangerousness to self and others. Among us are professionals whom the courts and criminal justice system regularly turn to for our expert opinion in these matters. We are also consulted by governments in matters related to national security and the psychological profiles of world leaders. Prior to the presidential election in the Fall of 2024, a statement assessing Donald J. Trump’s mental fitness for the presidency was issued. At that time, serious signs of cognitive decline were identified, and in our expert opinion, these signs warranted disqualification from office. 

    It is our professional opinion, based on previous and ongoing assessments, that Donald Trump’s mental state since our 2024 statement has deteriorated even further. In keeping with our professional ethics, and for those of us who are physicians, with the Declaration of Geneva—the successor to the Hippocratic Oath that binds us to the humanitarian principles of medicine since the Nuremberg trials—we are compelled to warn of a President of the United States who is increasingly a danger to the public. 

    We do not take our statement, and the responsibility that comes with making it, lightly. 

    The President was not examined face to face, and he is not a patient of any member of our group. Rendering a formal diagnosis in this case is not our role. We have closely followed his behavior and his statements over the past year. 

    Objectively observable signs of serious medical concern include:

    • Marked deterioration in cognitive functioning, evidenced by disorganized and tangential speech, rambling digressions, factual confusions, unexplained sudden changes of course in strategic matters, both national and international, episodes of apparent somnolence during critical public proceedings.
    • Grandiose and delusional beliefs, including assertions of infallibility, imagery of himself as Pope suggestive of a divine mission, being a mythical warrior hero, depicting himself as combat pilot—dropping feces on civilians, and claims that his decision-making authority is unlimited—with no need to consider domestic and international laws and constrained only by his “own morality.”
    • Severely impaired judgment and impulse control, reflected in reckless threats of violence, advocacy of lethal force against civilians, encouragement of extrajudicial actions by armed supporters, repeated threats and often actions—judicial, prosecutorial, police, military, and by invoking emergency powers—against political opponents and others who disagree with him.
    • Significant loss of self-control (disinhibition) and getting stuck on the same thoughts or actions, unable to let go or move on (perseveration), including seemingly compulsive, manic-like late-night communications—e.g., 150 social media posts in one night—fixation on perceived enemies, persecutory ideas, and prolonged, disproportionate attacks on specific individuals and institutions.
    • Escalating violence that threatens national and global stability. As Commander-in-Chief of our military—more than 5000 nuclear warheads in inter-continental missile silos, on submarines, and in bombers around the world, are ready for launch solely upon his order, and no one now has the authority to countermand his order. 

    On August 7, 1974, as President Richard Nixon’s impeachment loomed, White House Chief of Staff, General Alexander Haig, was so alarmed by Nixon’s wandering the halls of the White House at night, sleepless, distraught, and heavily intoxicated, talking out loud to portraits of past presidents on the walls, that he alerted Defense Secretary James Schlesinger. Equally alarmed, Schlesinger directed Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General George S. Brown, that any military orders from Nixon—especially nuclear ones—first be cleared through him or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.  It has been reported that the nuclear “football” that contains the codes for a nuclear launch was then quietly removed from Nixon’s control.

    The public and those with the power to address such potentially catastrophic conditions must ask themselves if they—and we—are confident that officials such as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio would do the same.

    It is our professional opinion that the behaviors of Donald Trump, tragically, are neither momentary lapses nor political theater. It is our professional opinion that they reflect a rapidly worsening, reality-untethered, increasingly dangerous decline. If we were called upon under the 25th Amendment to judge the President’s present ability to discharge the duties of his office, we would have to conclude that he lacks the capacity to do so.

    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our   country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency, with vital responsibilities on the shoulders of those in positions of leadership. 

    Signatories,

    Henry David Abraham, M.D.

    Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus 

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Bernard D. Beitman, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus and Former Chair of Psychiatry

    University of Missouri School of Medicine

    William Bernet, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

    Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

    Ravi Chandra, M.D.

    Distinguished Fellow, American Psychiatric Association

    Eric Chivian, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Co-Founder, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War

    Recipient of the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize

    Lance Dodes, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Training and Supervising Analyst Emeritus 

    Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute

    Jennifer I. Downey, M.D.

    Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

    George Drinka, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Oregon Health Sciences University

    Former Medical Director, CPC Cedar Hills Hospital 

    Portland, Oregon

    Julian Fisher, M.D.

    Former Lecturer in Neurology

    Harvard Medical School

    Justin Frank, M.D.

    Former Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine 

    Co-Director, Metropolitan Center for Object Relations 

    New York City

    Mindy T. Fullilove, M.D.

    Professor Emerita of Urban Policy and Health

    The New School 

    Nanette Gartrell, M.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco

    Prudence L. Gourguechon, M.D.

    Past President, American Psychoanalytic Association

    Gordan P. Harper, M.D.

    Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    Ira Helfand, M.D.

    Former Chair of Emergency Medicine

    Cooley-Dickinson Hospital

    International Steering Group

    The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons

    Recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize

    Julia C. Hoigaard, Ph.D.

    Former Lecturer in Psychology

    University of California, Irvine

    Co-author of Gottschalk-Gleser Content Analysis Scales

    Howard Hu, M.D., M.P.H., Sc.D. 

    Professor of Population and Public Health Sciences 

    Keck School of Medicine of USC 

    University of Southern California 

    Jerome Kroll, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

    University of Minnesota Medical School

    Robert S. Lawrence, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus, Center for a Livable Future

    Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

    Former Chief of Medicine,  Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    Bandy X. Lee, M.D., M.Div.

    President, World Mental Health Coalition (Washington, DC)

    Co-Founder, Preventing Violence Now (New York)

    Former Faculty of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School

    Former Faculty of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine

    Rosanne M. Leipzig, M.D., Ph.D.

    Professor Emerita of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    Craig Malkin, Ph.D.

    Lecturer in Psychology, Harvard Medical School

    Former Chief Inpatient Psychologist

    Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    James R. Merikangas, M.D.

    Neuropsychiatrist and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Dee Mosbacher, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry 

    University of California, San Francisco  

    Denis J. O’Keefe, Ph.D., L.C.S.W.

    Professor of Social Work

    New York University

    Past President, International Psychohistorical Association

    Jennifer C. Panning, Psy.D.

    Founder, Mindful Psychology Associates (Evanston, IL)

    John O. Pastore, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Former Research Physician

    Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission, Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    Mark Peppercorn, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine Emeritus

    Harvard Medical School

    Claire Pouncey, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former President

    Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry

    Robert C. Rutherford M.D. M.P.H.

    Emergency Physician

    Former Director, Monroe County Health Department

    Florida

    Larry S. Sandberg, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Weill Cornell Medical Center

    Stephen Soldz, Ph.D.

    Professor, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis

    Former President, Psychologists for Social Responsibility

    Co-Founder, Coalition for an Ethical Psychology

    Lise Van Susteren, M.D.

    Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Consultant Profiler to the Executive Branch, Federal Government

    Michael J. Tansey, Ph.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychology

    Northwestern University Medical School

    Mark W. Weber, Ph.D., L.I.C.S.W.

    Former Lecturer in Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    John Zinner, M.D.

    Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science

    George Washington University Medical Center

    Former Head of Family Therapy Studies,

    National Institute of Mental Health

    #BehavioralScience #DonaldTrump #HarvardMedicalSchool #Health #Medicine #Psychiatry #Psychology
  2. Medical Experts Call for Donald Trump Removal From Office.


    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency…

    Article republished by Jerry Alatalo via PeaceandHealthBlog.com | May 6, 2026

    [Editor’s note: I have nothing more to add to the profound, sane, focused warning message from this group of medical experts. Peace.]

    ***

    Medical Experts Declare President Trump Too Unstable to Remain in Office, Cite Nuclear Weapons Risks

    May 5, 2026

    tags: medicine, nuclear weapons, Trump, USA

    by IPPNW

    On April 30, 2026, a group of 36 leading physicians and other doctors with expertise in mental health issued a statement calling for President Donald J. Trump’s immediate, lawful removal from office for medical reasons. His mental instability, coupled with his sole, unchecked authority to launch nuclear weapons, makes him a clear and present danger to the safety of all Americans, they declared. The U.S. Senate offices of Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Jack Reed (D-RI) entered the experts’ statement into the Congressional Record, Vol. 172, No. 76. 

    Read the statement in full here and below.

    Medical Concerns about President Donald J. Trump and His Fitness for Office

    The following is not a political statement. It is a medical one, made by individuals holding both conservative and liberal ideologies, identifying as both Republicans and Democrats, from different backgrounds, races, ethnicities, and religions. 

    We are a group of neurologists, forensic psychiatrists, general psychiatrists, and other physicians, along with other mental health professionals, experienced in the diagnosis of cognitive disorders and in evaluating dangerousness to self and others. Among us are professionals whom the courts and criminal justice system regularly turn to for our expert opinion in these matters. We are also consulted by governments in matters related to national security and the psychological profiles of world leaders. Prior to the presidential election in the Fall of 2024, a statement assessing Donald J. Trump’s mental fitness for the presidency was issued. At that time, serious signs of cognitive decline were identified, and in our expert opinion, these signs warranted disqualification from office. 

    It is our professional opinion, based on previous and ongoing assessments, that Donald Trump’s mental state since our 2024 statement has deteriorated even further. In keeping with our professional ethics, and for those of us who are physicians, with the Declaration of Geneva—the successor to the Hippocratic Oath that binds us to the humanitarian principles of medicine since the Nuremberg trials—we are compelled to warn of a President of the United States who is increasingly a danger to the public. 

    We do not take our statement, and the responsibility that comes with making it, lightly. 

    The President was not examined face to face, and he is not a patient of any member of our group. Rendering a formal diagnosis in this case is not our role. We have closely followed his behavior and his statements over the past year. 

    Objectively observable signs of serious medical concern include:

    • Marked deterioration in cognitive functioning, evidenced by disorganized and tangential speech, rambling digressions, factual confusions, unexplained sudden changes of course in strategic matters, both national and international, episodes of apparent somnolence during critical public proceedings.
    • Grandiose and delusional beliefs, including assertions of infallibility, imagery of himself as Pope suggestive of a divine mission, being a mythical warrior hero, depicting himself as combat pilot—dropping feces on civilians, and claims that his decision-making authority is unlimited—with no need to consider domestic and international laws and constrained only by his “own morality.”
    • Severely impaired judgment and impulse control, reflected in reckless threats of violence, advocacy of lethal force against civilians, encouragement of extrajudicial actions by armed supporters, repeated threats and often actions—judicial, prosecutorial, police, military, and by invoking emergency powers—against political opponents and others who disagree with him.
    • Significant loss of self-control (disinhibition) and getting stuck on the same thoughts or actions, unable to let go or move on (perseveration), including seemingly compulsive, manic-like late-night communications—e.g., 150 social media posts in one night—fixation on perceived enemies, persecutory ideas, and prolonged, disproportionate attacks on specific individuals and institutions.
    • Escalating violence that threatens national and global stability. As Commander-in-Chief of our military—more than 5000 nuclear warheads in inter-continental missile silos, on submarines, and in bombers around the world, are ready for launch solely upon his order, and no one now has the authority to countermand his order. 

    On August 7, 1974, as President Richard Nixon’s impeachment loomed, White House Chief of Staff, General Alexander Haig, was so alarmed by Nixon’s wandering the halls of the White House at night, sleepless, distraught, and heavily intoxicated, talking out loud to portraits of past presidents on the walls, that he alerted Defense Secretary James Schlesinger. Equally alarmed, Schlesinger directed Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General George S. Brown, that any military orders from Nixon—especially nuclear ones—first be cleared through him or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.  It has been reported that the nuclear “football” that contains the codes for a nuclear launch was then quietly removed from Nixon’s control.

    The public and those with the power to address such potentially catastrophic conditions must ask themselves if they—and we—are confident that officials such as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio would do the same.

    It is our professional opinion that the behaviors of Donald Trump, tragically, are neither momentary lapses nor political theater. It is our professional opinion that they reflect a rapidly worsening, reality-untethered, increasingly dangerous decline. If we were called upon under the 25th Amendment to judge the President’s present ability to discharge the duties of his office, we would have to conclude that he lacks the capacity to do so.

    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our   country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency, with vital responsibilities on the shoulders of those in positions of leadership. 

    Signatories,

    Henry David Abraham, M.D.

    Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus 

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Bernard D. Beitman, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus and Former Chair of Psychiatry

    University of Missouri School of Medicine

    William Bernet, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

    Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

    Ravi Chandra, M.D.

    Distinguished Fellow, American Psychiatric Association

    Eric Chivian, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Co-Founder, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War

    Recipient of the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize

    Lance Dodes, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Training and Supervising Analyst Emeritus 

    Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute

    Jennifer I. Downey, M.D.

    Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

    George Drinka, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Oregon Health Sciences University

    Former Medical Director, CPC Cedar Hills Hospital 

    Portland, Oregon

    Julian Fisher, M.D.

    Former Lecturer in Neurology

    Harvard Medical School

    Justin Frank, M.D.

    Former Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine 

    Co-Director, Metropolitan Center for Object Relations 

    New York City

    Mindy T. Fullilove, M.D.

    Professor Emerita of Urban Policy and Health

    The New School 

    Nanette Gartrell, M.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco

    Prudence L. Gourguechon, M.D.

    Past President, American Psychoanalytic Association

    Gordan P. Harper, M.D.

    Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    Ira Helfand, M.D.

    Former Chair of Emergency Medicine

    Cooley-Dickinson Hospital

    International Steering Group

    The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons

    Recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize

    Julia C. Hoigaard, Ph.D.

    Former Lecturer in Psychology

    University of California, Irvine

    Co-author of Gottschalk-Gleser Content Analysis Scales

    Howard Hu, M.D., M.P.H., Sc.D. 

    Professor of Population and Public Health Sciences 

    Keck School of Medicine of USC 

    University of Southern California 

    Jerome Kroll, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

    University of Minnesota Medical School

    Robert S. Lawrence, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus, Center for a Livable Future

    Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

    Former Chief of Medicine,  Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    Bandy X. Lee, M.D., M.Div.

    President, World Mental Health Coalition (Washington, DC)

    Co-Founder, Preventing Violence Now (New York)

    Former Faculty of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School

    Former Faculty of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine

    Rosanne M. Leipzig, M.D., Ph.D.

    Professor Emerita of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    Craig Malkin, Ph.D.

    Lecturer in Psychology, Harvard Medical School

    Former Chief Inpatient Psychologist

    Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    James R. Merikangas, M.D.

    Neuropsychiatrist and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Dee Mosbacher, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry 

    University of California, San Francisco  

    Denis J. O’Keefe, Ph.D., L.C.S.W.

    Professor of Social Work

    New York University

    Past President, International Psychohistorical Association

    Jennifer C. Panning, Psy.D.

    Founder, Mindful Psychology Associates (Evanston, IL)

    John O. Pastore, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Former Research Physician

    Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission, Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    Mark Peppercorn, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine Emeritus

    Harvard Medical School

    Claire Pouncey, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former President

    Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry

    Robert C. Rutherford M.D. M.P.H.

    Emergency Physician

    Former Director, Monroe County Health Department

    Florida

    Larry S. Sandberg, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Weill Cornell Medical Center

    Stephen Soldz, Ph.D.

    Professor, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis

    Former President, Psychologists for Social Responsibility

    Co-Founder, Coalition for an Ethical Psychology

    Lise Van Susteren, M.D.

    Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Consultant Profiler to the Executive Branch, Federal Government

    Michael J. Tansey, Ph.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychology

    Northwestern University Medical School

    Mark W. Weber, Ph.D., L.I.C.S.W.

    Former Lecturer in Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    John Zinner, M.D.

    Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science

    George Washington University Medical Center

    Former Head of Family Therapy Studies,

    National Institute of Mental Health

    #BehavioralScience #DonaldTrump #HarvardMedicalSchool #Health #Medicine #Psychiatry #Psychology
  3. Medical Experts Call for Donald Trump Removal From Office.


    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency…

    Article republished by Jerry Alatalo via PeaceandHealthBlog.com | May 6, 2026

    [Editor’s note: I have nothing more to add to the profound, sane, focused warning message from this group of medical experts. Peace.]

    ***

    Medical Experts Declare President Trump Too Unstable to Remain in Office, Cite Nuclear Weapons Risks

    May 5, 2026

    tags: medicine, nuclear weapons, Trump, USA

    by IPPNW

    On April 30, 2026, a group of 36 leading physicians and other doctors with expertise in mental health issued a statement calling for President Donald J. Trump’s immediate, lawful removal from office for medical reasons. His mental instability, coupled with his sole, unchecked authority to launch nuclear weapons, makes him a clear and present danger to the safety of all Americans, they declared. The U.S. Senate offices of Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Jack Reed (D-RI) entered the experts’ statement into the Congressional Record, Vol. 172, No. 76. 

    Read the statement in full here and below.

    Medical Concerns about President Donald J. Trump and His Fitness for Office

    The following is not a political statement. It is a medical one, made by individuals holding both conservative and liberal ideologies, identifying as both Republicans and Democrats, from different backgrounds, races, ethnicities, and religions. 

    We are a group of neurologists, forensic psychiatrists, general psychiatrists, and other physicians, along with other mental health professionals, experienced in the diagnosis of cognitive disorders and in evaluating dangerousness to self and others. Among us are professionals whom the courts and criminal justice system regularly turn to for our expert opinion in these matters. We are also consulted by governments in matters related to national security and the psychological profiles of world leaders. Prior to the presidential election in the Fall of 2024, a statement assessing Donald J. Trump’s mental fitness for the presidency was issued. At that time, serious signs of cognitive decline were identified, and in our expert opinion, these signs warranted disqualification from office. 

    It is our professional opinion, based on previous and ongoing assessments, that Donald Trump’s mental state since our 2024 statement has deteriorated even further. In keeping with our professional ethics, and for those of us who are physicians, with the Declaration of Geneva—the successor to the Hippocratic Oath that binds us to the humanitarian principles of medicine since the Nuremberg trials—we are compelled to warn of a President of the United States who is increasingly a danger to the public. 

    We do not take our statement, and the responsibility that comes with making it, lightly. 

    The President was not examined face to face, and he is not a patient of any member of our group. Rendering a formal diagnosis in this case is not our role. We have closely followed his behavior and his statements over the past year. 

    Objectively observable signs of serious medical concern include:

    • Marked deterioration in cognitive functioning, evidenced by disorganized and tangential speech, rambling digressions, factual confusions, unexplained sudden changes of course in strategic matters, both national and international, episodes of apparent somnolence during critical public proceedings.
    • Grandiose and delusional beliefs, including assertions of infallibility, imagery of himself as Pope suggestive of a divine mission, being a mythical warrior hero, depicting himself as combat pilot—dropping feces on civilians, and claims that his decision-making authority is unlimited—with no need to consider domestic and international laws and constrained only by his “own morality.”
    • Severely impaired judgment and impulse control, reflected in reckless threats of violence, advocacy of lethal force against civilians, encouragement of extrajudicial actions by armed supporters, repeated threats and often actions—judicial, prosecutorial, police, military, and by invoking emergency powers—against political opponents and others who disagree with him.
    • Significant loss of self-control (disinhibition) and getting stuck on the same thoughts or actions, unable to let go or move on (perseveration), including seemingly compulsive, manic-like late-night communications—e.g., 150 social media posts in one night—fixation on perceived enemies, persecutory ideas, and prolonged, disproportionate attacks on specific individuals and institutions.
    • Escalating violence that threatens national and global stability. As Commander-in-Chief of our military—more than 5000 nuclear warheads in inter-continental missile silos, on submarines, and in bombers around the world, are ready for launch solely upon his order, and no one now has the authority to countermand his order. 

    On August 7, 1974, as President Richard Nixon’s impeachment loomed, White House Chief of Staff, General Alexander Haig, was so alarmed by Nixon’s wandering the halls of the White House at night, sleepless, distraught, and heavily intoxicated, talking out loud to portraits of past presidents on the walls, that he alerted Defense Secretary James Schlesinger. Equally alarmed, Schlesinger directed Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General George S. Brown, that any military orders from Nixon—especially nuclear ones—first be cleared through him or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.  It has been reported that the nuclear “football” that contains the codes for a nuclear launch was then quietly removed from Nixon’s control.

    The public and those with the power to address such potentially catastrophic conditions must ask themselves if they—and we—are confident that officials such as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio would do the same.

    It is our professional opinion that the behaviors of Donald Trump, tragically, are neither momentary lapses nor political theater. It is our professional opinion that they reflect a rapidly worsening, reality-untethered, increasingly dangerous decline. If we were called upon under the 25th Amendment to judge the President’s present ability to discharge the duties of his office, we would have to conclude that he lacks the capacity to do so.

    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our   country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency, with vital responsibilities on the shoulders of those in positions of leadership. 

    Signatories,

    Henry David Abraham, M.D.

    Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus 

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Bernard D. Beitman, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus and Former Chair of Psychiatry

    University of Missouri School of Medicine

    William Bernet, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

    Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

    Ravi Chandra, M.D.

    Distinguished Fellow, American Psychiatric Association

    Eric Chivian, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Co-Founder, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War

    Recipient of the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize

    Lance Dodes, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Training and Supervising Analyst Emeritus 

    Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute

    Jennifer I. Downey, M.D.

    Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

    George Drinka, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Oregon Health Sciences University

    Former Medical Director, CPC Cedar Hills Hospital 

    Portland, Oregon

    Julian Fisher, M.D.

    Former Lecturer in Neurology

    Harvard Medical School

    Justin Frank, M.D.

    Former Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine 

    Co-Director, Metropolitan Center for Object Relations 

    New York City

    Mindy T. Fullilove, M.D.

    Professor Emerita of Urban Policy and Health

    The New School 

    Nanette Gartrell, M.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco

    Prudence L. Gourguechon, M.D.

    Past President, American Psychoanalytic Association

    Gordan P. Harper, M.D.

    Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    Ira Helfand, M.D.

    Former Chair of Emergency Medicine

    Cooley-Dickinson Hospital

    International Steering Group

    The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons

    Recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize

    Julia C. Hoigaard, Ph.D.

    Former Lecturer in Psychology

    University of California, Irvine

    Co-author of Gottschalk-Gleser Content Analysis Scales

    Howard Hu, M.D., M.P.H., Sc.D. 

    Professor of Population and Public Health Sciences 

    Keck School of Medicine of USC 

    University of Southern California 

    Jerome Kroll, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

    University of Minnesota Medical School

    Robert S. Lawrence, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus, Center for a Livable Future

    Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

    Former Chief of Medicine,  Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    Bandy X. Lee, M.D., M.Div.

    President, World Mental Health Coalition (Washington, DC)

    Co-Founder, Preventing Violence Now (New York)

    Former Faculty of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School

    Former Faculty of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine

    Rosanne M. Leipzig, M.D., Ph.D.

    Professor Emerita of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    Craig Malkin, Ph.D.

    Lecturer in Psychology, Harvard Medical School

    Former Chief Inpatient Psychologist

    Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    James R. Merikangas, M.D.

    Neuropsychiatrist and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Dee Mosbacher, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry 

    University of California, San Francisco  

    Denis J. O’Keefe, Ph.D., L.C.S.W.

    Professor of Social Work

    New York University

    Past President, International Psychohistorical Association

    Jennifer C. Panning, Psy.D.

    Founder, Mindful Psychology Associates (Evanston, IL)

    John O. Pastore, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Former Research Physician

    Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission, Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    Mark Peppercorn, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine Emeritus

    Harvard Medical School

    Claire Pouncey, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former President

    Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry

    Robert C. Rutherford M.D. M.P.H.

    Emergency Physician

    Former Director, Monroe County Health Department

    Florida

    Larry S. Sandberg, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Weill Cornell Medical Center

    Stephen Soldz, Ph.D.

    Professor, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis

    Former President, Psychologists for Social Responsibility

    Co-Founder, Coalition for an Ethical Psychology

    Lise Van Susteren, M.D.

    Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Consultant Profiler to the Executive Branch, Federal Government

    Michael J. Tansey, Ph.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychology

    Northwestern University Medical School

    Mark W. Weber, Ph.D., L.I.C.S.W.

    Former Lecturer in Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    John Zinner, M.D.

    Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science

    George Washington University Medical Center

    Former Head of Family Therapy Studies,

    National Institute of Mental Health

    #BehavioralScience #DonaldTrump #HarvardMedicalSchool #Health #Medicine #Psychiatry #Psychology
  4. Medical Experts Call for Donald Trump Removal From Office.


    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency…

    Article republished by Jerry Alatalo via PeaceandHealthBlog.com | May 6, 2026

    [Editor’s note: I have nothing more to add to the profound, sane, focused warning message from this group of medical experts. Peace.]

    ***

    Medical Experts Declare President Trump Too Unstable to Remain in Office, Cite Nuclear Weapons Risks

    May 5, 2026

    tags: medicine, nuclear weapons, Trump, USA

    by IPPNW

    On April 30, 2026, a group of 36 leading physicians and other doctors with expertise in mental health issued a statement calling for President Donald J. Trump’s immediate, lawful removal from office for medical reasons. His mental instability, coupled with his sole, unchecked authority to launch nuclear weapons, makes him a clear and present danger to the safety of all Americans, they declared. The U.S. Senate offices of Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Jack Reed (D-RI) entered the experts’ statement into the Congressional Record, Vol. 172, No. 76. 

    Read the statement in full here and below.

    Medical Concerns about President Donald J. Trump and His Fitness for Office

    The following is not a political statement. It is a medical one, made by individuals holding both conservative and liberal ideologies, identifying as both Republicans and Democrats, from different backgrounds, races, ethnicities, and religions. 

    We are a group of neurologists, forensic psychiatrists, general psychiatrists, and other physicians, along with other mental health professionals, experienced in the diagnosis of cognitive disorders and in evaluating dangerousness to self and others. Among us are professionals whom the courts and criminal justice system regularly turn to for our expert opinion in these matters. We are also consulted by governments in matters related to national security and the psychological profiles of world leaders. Prior to the presidential election in the Fall of 2024, a statement assessing Donald J. Trump’s mental fitness for the presidency was issued. At that time, serious signs of cognitive decline were identified, and in our expert opinion, these signs warranted disqualification from office. 

    It is our professional opinion, based on previous and ongoing assessments, that Donald Trump’s mental state since our 2024 statement has deteriorated even further. In keeping with our professional ethics, and for those of us who are physicians, with the Declaration of Geneva—the successor to the Hippocratic Oath that binds us to the humanitarian principles of medicine since the Nuremberg trials—we are compelled to warn of a President of the United States who is increasingly a danger to the public. 

    We do not take our statement, and the responsibility that comes with making it, lightly. 

    The President was not examined face to face, and he is not a patient of any member of our group. Rendering a formal diagnosis in this case is not our role. We have closely followed his behavior and his statements over the past year. 

    Objectively observable signs of serious medical concern include:

    • Marked deterioration in cognitive functioning, evidenced by disorganized and tangential speech, rambling digressions, factual confusions, unexplained sudden changes of course in strategic matters, both national and international, episodes of apparent somnolence during critical public proceedings.
    • Grandiose and delusional beliefs, including assertions of infallibility, imagery of himself as Pope suggestive of a divine mission, being a mythical warrior hero, depicting himself as combat pilot—dropping feces on civilians, and claims that his decision-making authority is unlimited—with no need to consider domestic and international laws and constrained only by his “own morality.”
    • Severely impaired judgment and impulse control, reflected in reckless threats of violence, advocacy of lethal force against civilians, encouragement of extrajudicial actions by armed supporters, repeated threats and often actions—judicial, prosecutorial, police, military, and by invoking emergency powers—against political opponents and others who disagree with him.
    • Significant loss of self-control (disinhibition) and getting stuck on the same thoughts or actions, unable to let go or move on (perseveration), including seemingly compulsive, manic-like late-night communications—e.g., 150 social media posts in one night—fixation on perceived enemies, persecutory ideas, and prolonged, disproportionate attacks on specific individuals and institutions.
    • Escalating violence that threatens national and global stability. As Commander-in-Chief of our military—more than 5000 nuclear warheads in inter-continental missile silos, on submarines, and in bombers around the world, are ready for launch solely upon his order, and no one now has the authority to countermand his order. 

    On August 7, 1974, as President Richard Nixon’s impeachment loomed, White House Chief of Staff, General Alexander Haig, was so alarmed by Nixon’s wandering the halls of the White House at night, sleepless, distraught, and heavily intoxicated, talking out loud to portraits of past presidents on the walls, that he alerted Defense Secretary James Schlesinger. Equally alarmed, Schlesinger directed Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General George S. Brown, that any military orders from Nixon—especially nuclear ones—first be cleared through him or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.  It has been reported that the nuclear “football” that contains the codes for a nuclear launch was then quietly removed from Nixon’s control.

    The public and those with the power to address such potentially catastrophic conditions must ask themselves if they—and we—are confident that officials such as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio would do the same.

    It is our professional opinion that the behaviors of Donald Trump, tragically, are neither momentary lapses nor political theater. It is our professional opinion that they reflect a rapidly worsening, reality-untethered, increasingly dangerous decline. If we were called upon under the 25th Amendment to judge the President’s present ability to discharge the duties of his office, we would have to conclude that he lacks the capacity to do so.

    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our   country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency, with vital responsibilities on the shoulders of those in positions of leadership. 

    Signatories,

    Henry David Abraham, M.D.

    Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus 

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Bernard D. Beitman, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus and Former Chair of Psychiatry

    University of Missouri School of Medicine

    William Bernet, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

    Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

    Ravi Chandra, M.D.

    Distinguished Fellow, American Psychiatric Association

    Eric Chivian, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Co-Founder, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War

    Recipient of the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize

    Lance Dodes, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Training and Supervising Analyst Emeritus 

    Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute

    Jennifer I. Downey, M.D.

    Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

    George Drinka, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Oregon Health Sciences University

    Former Medical Director, CPC Cedar Hills Hospital 

    Portland, Oregon

    Julian Fisher, M.D.

    Former Lecturer in Neurology

    Harvard Medical School

    Justin Frank, M.D.

    Former Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine 

    Co-Director, Metropolitan Center for Object Relations 

    New York City

    Mindy T. Fullilove, M.D.

    Professor Emerita of Urban Policy and Health

    The New School 

    Nanette Gartrell, M.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco

    Prudence L. Gourguechon, M.D.

    Past President, American Psychoanalytic Association

    Gordan P. Harper, M.D.

    Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    Ira Helfand, M.D.

    Former Chair of Emergency Medicine

    Cooley-Dickinson Hospital

    International Steering Group

    The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons

    Recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize

    Julia C. Hoigaard, Ph.D.

    Former Lecturer in Psychology

    University of California, Irvine

    Co-author of Gottschalk-Gleser Content Analysis Scales

    Howard Hu, M.D., M.P.H., Sc.D. 

    Professor of Population and Public Health Sciences 

    Keck School of Medicine of USC 

    University of Southern California 

    Jerome Kroll, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

    University of Minnesota Medical School

    Robert S. Lawrence, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus, Center for a Livable Future

    Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

    Former Chief of Medicine,  Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    Bandy X. Lee, M.D., M.Div.

    President, World Mental Health Coalition (Washington, DC)

    Co-Founder, Preventing Violence Now (New York)

    Former Faculty of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School

    Former Faculty of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine

    Rosanne M. Leipzig, M.D., Ph.D.

    Professor Emerita of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    Craig Malkin, Ph.D.

    Lecturer in Psychology, Harvard Medical School

    Former Chief Inpatient Psychologist

    Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    James R. Merikangas, M.D.

    Neuropsychiatrist and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Dee Mosbacher, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry 

    University of California, San Francisco  

    Denis J. O’Keefe, Ph.D., L.C.S.W.

    Professor of Social Work

    New York University

    Past President, International Psychohistorical Association

    Jennifer C. Panning, Psy.D.

    Founder, Mindful Psychology Associates (Evanston, IL)

    John O. Pastore, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Former Research Physician

    Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission, Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    Mark Peppercorn, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine Emeritus

    Harvard Medical School

    Claire Pouncey, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former President

    Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry

    Robert C. Rutherford M.D. M.P.H.

    Emergency Physician

    Former Director, Monroe County Health Department

    Florida

    Larry S. Sandberg, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Weill Cornell Medical Center

    Stephen Soldz, Ph.D.

    Professor, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis

    Former President, Psychologists for Social Responsibility

    Co-Founder, Coalition for an Ethical Psychology

    Lise Van Susteren, M.D.

    Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Consultant Profiler to the Executive Branch, Federal Government

    Michael J. Tansey, Ph.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychology

    Northwestern University Medical School

    Mark W. Weber, Ph.D., L.I.C.S.W.

    Former Lecturer in Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    John Zinner, M.D.

    Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science

    George Washington University Medical Center

    Former Head of Family Therapy Studies,

    National Institute of Mental Health

    #BehavioralScience #DonaldTrump #HarvardMedicalSchool #Health #Medicine #Psychiatry #Psychology
  5. Medical Experts Call for Donald Trump Removal From Office.


    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency…

    Article republished by Jerry Alatalo via PeaceandHealthBlog.com | May 6, 2026

    [Editor’s note: I have nothing more to add to the profound, sane, focused warning message from this group of medical experts. Peace.]

    ***

    Medical Experts Declare President Trump Too Unstable to Remain in Office, Cite Nuclear Weapons Risks

    May 5, 2026

    tags: medicine, nuclear weapons, Trump, USA

    by IPPNW

    On April 30, 2026, a group of 36 leading physicians and other doctors with expertise in mental health issued a statement calling for President Donald J. Trump’s immediate, lawful removal from office for medical reasons. His mental instability, coupled with his sole, unchecked authority to launch nuclear weapons, makes him a clear and present danger to the safety of all Americans, they declared. The U.S. Senate offices of Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) and Jack Reed (D-RI) entered the experts’ statement into the Congressional Record, Vol. 172, No. 76. 

    Read the statement in full here and below.

    Medical Concerns about President Donald J. Trump and His Fitness for Office

    The following is not a political statement. It is a medical one, made by individuals holding both conservative and liberal ideologies, identifying as both Republicans and Democrats, from different backgrounds, races, ethnicities, and religions. 

    We are a group of neurologists, forensic psychiatrists, general psychiatrists, and other physicians, along with other mental health professionals, experienced in the diagnosis of cognitive disorders and in evaluating dangerousness to self and others. Among us are professionals whom the courts and criminal justice system regularly turn to for our expert opinion in these matters. We are also consulted by governments in matters related to national security and the psychological profiles of world leaders. Prior to the presidential election in the Fall of 2024, a statement assessing Donald J. Trump’s mental fitness for the presidency was issued. At that time, serious signs of cognitive decline were identified, and in our expert opinion, these signs warranted disqualification from office. 

    It is our professional opinion, based on previous and ongoing assessments, that Donald Trump’s mental state since our 2024 statement has deteriorated even further. In keeping with our professional ethics, and for those of us who are physicians, with the Declaration of Geneva—the successor to the Hippocratic Oath that binds us to the humanitarian principles of medicine since the Nuremberg trials—we are compelled to warn of a President of the United States who is increasingly a danger to the public. 

    We do not take our statement, and the responsibility that comes with making it, lightly. 

    The President was not examined face to face, and he is not a patient of any member of our group. Rendering a formal diagnosis in this case is not our role. We have closely followed his behavior and his statements over the past year. 

    Objectively observable signs of serious medical concern include:

    • Marked deterioration in cognitive functioning, evidenced by disorganized and tangential speech, rambling digressions, factual confusions, unexplained sudden changes of course in strategic matters, both national and international, episodes of apparent somnolence during critical public proceedings.
    • Grandiose and delusional beliefs, including assertions of infallibility, imagery of himself as Pope suggestive of a divine mission, being a mythical warrior hero, depicting himself as combat pilot—dropping feces on civilians, and claims that his decision-making authority is unlimited—with no need to consider domestic and international laws and constrained only by his “own morality.”
    • Severely impaired judgment and impulse control, reflected in reckless threats of violence, advocacy of lethal force against civilians, encouragement of extrajudicial actions by armed supporters, repeated threats and often actions—judicial, prosecutorial, police, military, and by invoking emergency powers—against political opponents and others who disagree with him.
    • Significant loss of self-control (disinhibition) and getting stuck on the same thoughts or actions, unable to let go or move on (perseveration), including seemingly compulsive, manic-like late-night communications—e.g., 150 social media posts in one night—fixation on perceived enemies, persecutory ideas, and prolonged, disproportionate attacks on specific individuals and institutions.
    • Escalating violence that threatens national and global stability. As Commander-in-Chief of our military—more than 5000 nuclear warheads in inter-continental missile silos, on submarines, and in bombers around the world, are ready for launch solely upon his order, and no one now has the authority to countermand his order. 

    On August 7, 1974, as President Richard Nixon’s impeachment loomed, White House Chief of Staff, General Alexander Haig, was so alarmed by Nixon’s wandering the halls of the White House at night, sleepless, distraught, and heavily intoxicated, talking out loud to portraits of past presidents on the walls, that he alerted Defense Secretary James Schlesinger. Equally alarmed, Schlesinger directed Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General George S. Brown, that any military orders from Nixon—especially nuclear ones—first be cleared through him or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.  It has been reported that the nuclear “football” that contains the codes for a nuclear launch was then quietly removed from Nixon’s control.

    The public and those with the power to address such potentially catastrophic conditions must ask themselves if they—and we—are confident that officials such as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio would do the same.

    It is our professional opinion that the behaviors of Donald Trump, tragically, are neither momentary lapses nor political theater. It is our professional opinion that they reflect a rapidly worsening, reality-untethered, increasingly dangerous decline. If we were called upon under the 25th Amendment to judge the President’s present ability to discharge the duties of his office, we would have to conclude that he lacks the capacity to do so.

    For the reasons cited above, emphasizing that he presents a clear and present danger to our   country and to the world, it is our expert opinion that Donald J. Trump is mentally unfit to be the President of the United States, and that steps to remove him from office must be undertaken with the greatest urgency, with vital responsibilities on the shoulders of those in positions of leadership. 

    Signatories,

    Henry David Abraham, M.D.

    Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus 

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Bernard D. Beitman, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus and Former Chair of Psychiatry

    University of Missouri School of Medicine

    William Bernet, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

    Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

    Ravi Chandra, M.D.

    Distinguished Fellow, American Psychiatric Association

    Eric Chivian, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Co-Founder, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War

    Recipient of the 1985 Nobel Peace Prize

    Lance Dodes, M.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry 

    Harvard Medical School

    Training and Supervising Analyst Emeritus 

    Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute

    Jennifer I. Downey, M.D.

    Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons

    George Drinka, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Oregon Health Sciences University

    Former Medical Director, CPC Cedar Hills Hospital 

    Portland, Oregon

    Julian Fisher, M.D.

    Former Lecturer in Neurology

    Harvard Medical School

    Justin Frank, M.D.

    Former Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine 

    Co-Director, Metropolitan Center for Object Relations 

    New York City

    Mindy T. Fullilove, M.D.

    Professor Emerita of Urban Policy and Health

    The New School 

    Nanette Gartrell, M.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

    Former Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco

    Prudence L. Gourguechon, M.D.

    Past President, American Psychoanalytic Association

    Gordan P. Harper, M.D.

    Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    Ira Helfand, M.D.

    Former Chair of Emergency Medicine

    Cooley-Dickinson Hospital

    International Steering Group

    The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons

    Recipient of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize

    Julia C. Hoigaard, Ph.D.

    Former Lecturer in Psychology

    University of California, Irvine

    Co-author of Gottschalk-Gleser Content Analysis Scales

    Howard Hu, M.D., M.P.H., Sc.D. 

    Professor of Population and Public Health Sciences 

    Keck School of Medicine of USC 

    University of Southern California 

    Jerome Kroll, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry

    University of Minnesota Medical School

    Robert S. Lawrence, M.D.

    Professor Emeritus, Center for a Livable Future

    Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

    Former Chief of Medicine,  Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    Bandy X. Lee, M.D., M.Div.

    President, World Mental Health Coalition (Washington, DC)

    Co-Founder, Preventing Violence Now (New York)

    Former Faculty of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School

    Former Faculty of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine

    Rosanne M. Leipzig, M.D., Ph.D.

    Professor Emerita of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine

    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

    Craig Malkin, Ph.D.

    Lecturer in Psychology, Harvard Medical School

    Former Chief Inpatient Psychologist

    Cambridge City Hospital,

    now known as The Cambridge Health Alliance

    James R. Merikangas, M.D.

    Neuropsychiatrist and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Dee Mosbacher, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former Professor of Psychiatry 

    University of California, San Francisco  

    Denis J. O’Keefe, Ph.D., L.C.S.W.

    Professor of Social Work

    New York University

    Past President, International Psychohistorical Association

    Jennifer C. Panning, Psy.D.

    Founder, Mindful Psychology Associates (Evanston, IL)

    John O. Pastore, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine

    Tufts University School of Medicine

    Former Research Physician

    Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission, Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    Mark Peppercorn, M.D.

    Professor of Medicine Emeritus

    Harvard Medical School

    Claire Pouncey, M.D., Ph.D.

    Former President

    Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry

    Robert C. Rutherford M.D. M.P.H.

    Emergency Physician

    Former Director, Monroe County Health Department

    Florida

    Larry S. Sandberg, M.D.

    Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry

    Weill Cornell Medical Center

    Stephen Soldz, Ph.D.

    Professor, Boston Graduate School of Psychoanalysis

    Former President, Psychologists for Social Responsibility

    Co-Founder, Coalition for an Ethical Psychology

    Lise Van Susteren, M.D.

    Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

    George Washington University School of Medicine

    Consultant Profiler to the Executive Branch, Federal Government

    Michael J. Tansey, Ph.D.

    Former Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychology

    Northwestern University Medical School

    Mark W. Weber, Ph.D., L.I.C.S.W.

    Former Lecturer in Psychiatry

    Harvard Medical School

    John Zinner, M.D.

    Clinical Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science

    George Washington University Medical Center

    Former Head of Family Therapy Studies,

    National Institute of Mental Health

    #BehavioralScience #DonaldTrump #HarvardMedicalSchool #Health #Medicine #Psychiatry #Psychology
  6. Redheads May Have Some Genetic Advantages. But They Are Predisposed to Other Illnesses, Scientists Say

    NEED TO KNOW Researchers studied 10,000 years of DNA to explore the genetics behind red hair and fair…
    #NewsBeep #News #Health #CA #Canada #CeliacDisease #Crohn'sdisease #fairskin #Genetics #glutensensitivity #HarvardMedicalSchool #male-patternbaldness #redhair
    newsbeep.com/ca/617473/

  7. "It was a lucrative business. Court records show that one buyer paid Denise Lodge more than $37,000, sending his payments with memos like 'head number 7' and 'braiiiiiins.'"

    For WBUR, Ally Jarmanning reports on the macabre market for human body parts: wbur.org/news/2024/06/13/harva

    #Longreads #Trafficking #HumanRemains #Collecting #HarvardMedicalSchool #Weird #Macabre #Death

  8. Bioinformatiker von #ChariteBerlin und #HarvardmedicalSchool haben eine neue Methode entwickelt, mit der sich die Funktion von Krankheitsgenen untersuchen lässt. Das kann helfen, krankheitsauslösende Signale zu verfolgen und medikamentös zu unterdrücken. charite.de/forschung/paper_spo

    #Forschung

  9. #Editors: #HarvardMedicalSchool's #magazine, Harvard Medicine, is searching for new #editor. (Current editor is leaving in January.) Work format: hybrid (partially on-site, partially remote). Full time. Get details & apply: tinyurl.com/57buwe8h. See magazine: tinyurl.com/ynt8ah8h. #Bookstodon

  10. Next was a fantastic discussion/lecture by Rueben C. Warren at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics on population #health, #ethics, #equity, #SocialJustice, and more. This conversation was deep, enlightening, and makes me optimistic for the future of ethical development. Also apparently #TuskegeeUniversity has a bioethics minor, which if you're recruiting folks I would suggest grabbing those students immediately. Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=PbMrQ-skG- (3/5)

  11. Next was a breathtaking panel on the responsibility of the #HealthCare field beyond hospitals at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics with Kelsey Berry, Lauren A Taylor, and Rishi Manchanda. The frameworks presented here are applicable to both #tech and #management more broadly, and Manchanda lays down the gauntlet for all of our collective responsibility to improve society. Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=IzgA5dFvff (4/9)

  12. Next was an excellent discussion on disparities in #surgery at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics with Douglas W. Hanto, Piroska Kopar, and Theresa Williamson. These bioethics panels are incredibly relevant for other fields, and this one gets at the importance of bringing one's view beyond traditional training to the societal context in which work is situated. Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=fQ0nY2spFY (5/7)

  13. First was an insightful panel on #ethics in #surgery #innovation with Richard Whyte, Theresa Williamson, John Mayer, Martin McKneally, and Louise King at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics. Collaboration between academia and industry is as essential as it is problematic, and in the surgical space in particular a variety of factors intersect and are explored here. There aren't easy answers, but great points examined here. Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=CHkAs-rHLY (2/7)

  14. First up was an amazing #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics panel on ethical challenges in global #surgery with Bethany Hedt-Gauthier, Rashi Jhunjhunwala, Michelle Joseph, and John Meara. Is it #ethical for surgeons to fly into developing countries for a week, help with surgeries, and then leave? How should surgeons going to those regions involve local medical personnel in their research, and #coauthoring papers? Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=IA8pYHIYV7 (2/6)

  15. Next was a fascinating discussion at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics with John Hick, Darlene Tad-y, Matthew Wynia, Erin Talati Paquette, and Elke Shaw-Tulloch on the #ethics of hospital transfers. This is an incredibly complex topic, one that involves #regulations, professional ethics, #technology, and more. Highly recommend.

    youtube.com/watch?v=E5Sk9bnxuH
    (5/15)

  16. Next was a stellar conversation between Monica McLemore and Michele Bratcher Goodwin at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics on ethical and #workforce considerations in abortion care provision. This discussion is pre-Dobbs, but the conversation is prescient and also focuses on how the medical profession should think about #training and #hiring ethical practitioners youtube.com/watch?v=DihA3myNlM (3/7)

  17. Next was a highly engaging talk by @gwagner on the ethics of solar geoengineering at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics. Moral hazards? Inverse moral hazards? Powerful, entrenched industries? This talk has it all. Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=c6QLd1HqSR (3/8)

  18. Next was a fantastic group of talks by Jason Delborne, Omar Akbari, and Insoo Hyun on the #ethics and implications of #GeneDrives at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics. The rigor, process, and thought going into not just developing this technology but in engaging with a variety of stakeholders and inclusively advancing (or not) is very instructive, highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=y_Erfg5_kF (3/5)

  19. First Toot(!) on Mastodon #EconTwitter #Introduction

    I'm an MD / Econ PhD student at #harvard studying health, IO, and public economics

    Currently thinking a lot about #antibiotic utilization, resistance, and innovation

    Now in my 3rd year of my #economics PhD at #harvard after two 2 years at #harvardmedicalschool

    Can't give medical advice but happy to give #coffee advice.

  20. Next was a fabulous talk by Patricia King at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics on #racism, #inclusion, and #justice in bioethics. This is one of the founders of modern bioethics, and King isn't afraid to question past decisions in the field or push for more meaningful change. Highly recommend, especially for those in tech and management youtube.com/watch?v=KxNEDSxgua (3/10)

  21. First up was an important talk by Susan Miller at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics on how #HoustonMethodist developed their mandatory #vaccination policy. There is so much packed into discussion: organizational #ethics, algorithmic ethics, #management, #transparency... Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=CRKF1GULkA (2/9)

  22. re-#Introduction with new handle after move to fediscience.org #ScienceMastodon

    Hi, I'm Sven, a #structural #biochemist who recently moved from #Dundee, Scotland to #Boston, MA to start a #postdoc in the Brown lab at #HarvardMedicalSchool.

    My broad interests are #structuralbiology
    #cryoEM
    #cilia
    #ubiquitin
    #biophysics
    #proteinfolding #proteinengineering
    #methods
    #CellBiology

    Looking to build a network on here! 🤝 😄

  23. Last was a fantastic panel at the #HarvardMedicalSchool Center for #Bioethics on exceptions to informed #consent with William Feldman, Neal Dickert, and Carrie Sims. The tech community would be wise to listen to how thoughtfully the medical field thinks about consent, and the rich conversation here indicates what it takes to start to do it right. Highly recommend youtube.com/watch?v=JPsLIA9Fd- (8/8)