Kennedy: Disease, History and Secrecy
HNN: The JFK Medical Files |
The recent revelation that President John F. Kennedy concealed his severe illnesses appears quite shocking and appalling from our modern perspective. As reported by the historian Robert Dallek, Kennedy had severe chronic back pain that led him to take a series of strong, potentially sedating medications. Kennedy also used stimulants and drugs to lower his anxiety level. Finally, he concealed his Addison's Disease, or failure of the adrenal glands, that forced him to take chronic steroids.
Yet it is crucial to place Kennedy's story in its proper historical perspective.
The secrecy that characterized his case was quite commonplace before 1970, both
among politicians and "ordinary" patients. And the new openness that
has subsequently emerged in medicine, while undoubtedly welcome, has nevertheless
jeopardized certain positive components of the physician-patient interaction.
During the years when John Kennedy was sick, discussions about disease were
usually limited to doctor and patient. Patients did not broadcast their diagnoses
but rather kept the knowledge to themselves and close relatives. Nor did physicians
discuss their patients in public, something that was explicitly forbidden by
the teachings of the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates. Only if doctors maintained
confidentiality, Hippocrates believed, could patients be entirely candid and
thus receive the best care.
Indeed, in an era in which paternalism dominated medicine, physicians and family
members at times conspired to keep the truth from patients. This secrecy occurred
most frequently in the case of cancer. Patients with this diagnosis were generally
told they had "tumors," "growths" or "inflammations."
Mrs. B., wrote a New York physician in 1957, "does not know that she has
carcinoma. She suspects that she does, but has been told before and again on
this admission that she does not." Learning a diagnosis of cancer, it was
believed, would cause patients to lose hope and perhaps commit suicide. When
the medical condition was something less dire than cancer, secrecy was less
of an issue. But doctors still routinely made treatment decisions without involving
patients.
Sick political figures, like other patients, were diagnosed and treated in this
atmosphere of reticence and secrecy. To be sure, when Eva Peron was diagnosed
with advanced cervical cancer in 1951, it made political sense not to tell the
Argentine people, who might then have been less inclined to reelect her husband,
Juan Domingo Peron. But beyond this, Eva Peron's family truly did not want her
to know her diagnosis. Her physicians were more than happy not to tell her.
By the early 1970s, however, patients were arguing that paternalism and secrecy
were preventing them from participating in important treatment decisions. Among
the most vocal critics were women with breast cancer, who publicly objected
to surgeons' routine use of the disfiguring radical mastectomy.
A decade later, AIDS activists took up the mantle. While the confidentiality
of an AIDS diagnosis was stressed, those willing to go public did so with a
vengeance. Visibility became a way to push for both funding and entry into clinical
trials. Today, the television and the Internet are replete with so-called illness
narratives, which recount personal struggles with various diseases.
Openness also became an increasingly commonplace among sick politicians. As
would Dallek, historians after 1970 used medical records and other sources to
describe how past presidents and their staffs had deceived the public. Grover
Cleveland, for example, had undergone a secret operation for cancer of the mouth
in 1893. After Woodrow Wilson suffered a debilitating stroke in 1919, his wife
Edith had basically run the country. Those close to Franklin Roosevelt correctly
had assumed that he would die during his fourth term, but the voters were never
told.
Although Edmund Morris has argued otherwise, many commentators believe that
Ronald Reagan significantly departed from this legacy of secrecy among politicians.
The 1981 assassination attempt on Reagan led to scrutiny of the "incapacitated"
president and the passage of the 25th Amendment, which provides a framework
for transferring power to the vice president. Reagan was also especially forthcoming
during a later bout with colon cancer.
Today, immediate revelations of illness are the norm among politicians. Former
New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani's experiences with prostate cancer, including
his treatment options, were scrutinized in great detail by the press. Vice President
Dick Cheney's clogged coronary arteries and presidential candidate Bill Bradley's
episodes of a heart arrhythmia generated similar attention.
There is, of course, no returning to the secrecy of the Kennedy era. The public
demands information about health when choosing among candidates. Qualified historians,
such as Dallek, should be given access to politicians' medical records after
an appropriate waiting time.
Yet our modern openness has come at a cost. John F. Kennedy could candidly speak
with his physicians about his medical problems without regard to how such information
would play in the press. In this sense, sick politicians--and others who choose
to go public with their illnesses--have lost an important benefit of being a
patient.