logo
Biden team says diagnosis only made in last week amid Trump criticism

Biden team says diagnosis only made in last week amid Trump criticism

Euronews22-05-2025

Former US President Joe Biden's "last known" prostate cancer screening was in 2014, and he had never been diagnosed with the disease before last week, according to his office.
Biden's aides released the new details about his diagnosis amid intense scrutiny of his health during his presidency, and scepticism that the disease could have progressed to an advanced stage without being detected.
Although Biden's cancer can possibly be controlled with treatment, it has spread to his bones and is no longer curable.
The brief statement from Biden's office did not disclose the results of his 2014 prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test.
"Prior to Friday, President Biden had never been diagnosed with prostate cancer," the statement said.
Biden's cancer was announced on Sunday, prompting a wave of sympathy but also suggestions from some of his critics, including his predecessor and now successor Donald Trump, that the former president and his aides covered up the disease while he was in the White House given the severity of the cancer when it was announced.
Tuesday's statement appeared aimed at tamping down that speculation.
Asked about Biden during an appearance at the White House, Trump said, "it takes a long time to get to that situation" and that he was "surprised that the public wasn't notified a long time ago".
"It's a very sad situation and I feel very badly about it," Trump said.
A memo from the White House physician released following Trump's annual physical exam in April listed a normal PSA. Biden's White House doctor did not include PSA results in the health summaries he released.
Screening with PSA blood tests can lead to unnecessary treatment with side effects that affect quality of life, and guidelines recommend against prostate cancer screening for men 70 and older. Biden is 82.
When caught early, prostate cancer is highly survivable, but it is also the second-leading cause of cancer death in men.
About two in five teenagers in Europe are struggling with their mental well-being, a new analysis has found, with girls faring worse than boys in each of the 37 countries included.
Young people today face a host of stressors, including social isolation and disruptions to their schooling caused by the COVID-19 pandemic as well as socioeconomic instability and the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza, according to the report, known as the European School Survey Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD).
The study, which has been following teens' alcohol, smoking, and drug habits for 30 years, included nearly 114,000 students aged 15 and 16 across 37 European countries.
For the first time in 2024, the report assessed their mental health as well.
To track teens' mental well-being, the survey asked students how their lives have been going lately; for example, how often they feel cheerful, wake up feeling fresh, and how interested they are in their daily lives.
The researchers converted those answers into an index score; students who scored above 50 out of 100 on the index were considered to have good mental well-being.
Overall, 59 per cent of teenagers met that threshold. But there were major regional differences across Europe, with teens in Nordic countries doing fairly well and those in Central and Eastern Europe faring worse.
Teenagers in the Danish territory of the Faroe Islands were the most likely to report good mental well-being (77 per cent), followed by Iceland (75 per cent), and Denmark (72 per cent).
Meanwhile, teenagers in Ukraine reported the worst mental health, with just 43 per cent classified as doing well. Ukrainian adolescents have limited access to mental health care, the report noted, leaving them to grapple with war-related trauma largely on their own.
The next-lowest rates of mental well-being were recorded in the Czech Republic (46 per cent), Hungary (47 per cent), Cyprus and Poland (49 per cent each).
'Mental health is deeply connected to the broader social environments in which young people grow up,' Kadri Soova, director of the advocacy group Mental Health Europe, told Euronews Health. She was not involved with the study.
Girls were worse off than boys in each of the 37 countries studied. Across Europe, 49 per cent of girls and 69 per cent of boys report good mental health.
The gender gaps were even more stark in some countries. In Italy and Poland, for example, about two-thirds of boys report good mental health, compared with one-third of girls.
In Sweden, the relatively high rate of teenage well-being overall (62 per cent) masks gender differences. About four in five boys had good mental well-being, compared with less than half of girls.
The poorer outcomes among girls 'signals the urgent need for targeted, context-sensitive responses,' Soova said.
Europe is not the only region grappling with a rising toll of mental health problems among youth. Over the past decade, the rate of young people with mental health disorders has risen in every part of the world, according to a recent analysis from the Lancet medical journal.
Soova called on policymakers to invest in mental health education and accessible support for young people.
'By addressing both traditional and emerging challenges from substance use to online risks, we can build environments where all adolescents have the opportunity to thrive in dignity and well-being,' she said.
If you are contemplating suicide and need to talk, please reach out to Befrienders Worldwide, an international organisation with helplines in 32 countries. Visit befrienders.org to find the telephone number for your location.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Europe suffers its largest diphtheria outbreak in 70 years
Europe suffers its largest diphtheria outbreak in 70 years

France 24

time9 minutes ago

  • France 24

Europe suffers its largest diphtheria outbreak in 70 years

Diphtheria is a highly contagious bacterial infection that can attack the respiratory tract and spread throughout the body, causing a sore throat, fever and other symptoms. For unvaccinated people, it can be fatal in around 30 percent of cases, and is deadlier for children, according to the World Health Organization. In 2022, there was an unusual surge in the bacteria that causes diphtheria -- Corynebacterium diphtheriae -- in several European countries, particularly among recently arrived migrants, according to a study in the New England Journal of Medicine. That year 362 cases were recorded by the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. Contact tracing and screening helped tamp down the outbreak, but rare infections have continued to be recorded, the researchers said. A total of 536 cases, including three deaths, have been recorded across Europe since the start of 2022. Patient samples from 10 countries showed that 98 percent of the cases were in males with an average age of 18. Almost all had recently migrated. "The outbreak, which mainly affected migrants from Afghanistan and Syria, was not the result of people being infected in their countries of origin, but during their migration journeys or in their places of accommodation in European countries," said a joint statement from France's public health agency and the Pasteur Institute. The genetic similarities between the strains seen in people from different countries suggests that there was a "recent point of contact, outside the country of origin" at the source of the outbreak, the statement added. The exact areas affected by the outbreak remains unclear. But a genetic link between the 2022 strain and the one detected in Germany this year indicates that "the bacteria continues to circulate quietly in Western Europe," the statement said. Vaccination is very effective at fending off diphtheria, and the researchers emphasised the importance of immunisation programmes for the general public. They also called for European nations to do more to ensure their most vulnerable people avoid contracting the disease. That included raising awareness of the symptoms among doctors and those in contact with migrants and the homeless, as well as increasing access to vaccines and antibiotic drugs.

Bulgaria presses ahead toward euro adoption
Bulgaria presses ahead toward euro adoption

LeMonde

time36 minutes ago

  • LeMonde

Bulgaria presses ahead toward euro adoption

Despite growing skepticism, Bulgarians are expected to adopt the euro on January 1, 2026. On Wednesday, June 4, the European Central Bank (ECB) gave its final approval for the country of 6.5 million people, located along the Black Sea and a member of the European Union (EU) since 2007, to join the eurozone. Presenting a positive Convergence Report, the Frankfurt-based institution found that all economic and legal criteria had been met, much to the satisfaction of the pro-European government in power in Sofia. Barring any surprises, the move to the single currency should be formally approved on July 8 at an Economic and Financial Affairs Council (ECOFIN) meeting of the eurozone's economy ministers. "This positive assessment of convergence paves the way for Bulgaria to (...) become the 21 st EU member state to join the euro area," said Philip Lane, a member of the ECB's Executive Board. The lev, the currency that has been in use since 1885 − currently worth 1.95 to the euro − is set to disappear. Business circles and the government of Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov, a conservative, have promised that adopting the euro will boost Bulgaria's economy, currently the weakest in the EU. However, the adoption has sparked growing concern among Bulgarians, who fear that companies will use the currency switch to raise prices, potentially reigniting the high inflation seen after the outbreak of war in Ukraine.

Trump administration blasted for trying to wipe gay rights icon Harvey Milk's name from US naval ship
Trump administration blasted for trying to wipe gay rights icon Harvey Milk's name from US naval ship

LeMonde

timean hour ago

  • LeMonde

Trump administration blasted for trying to wipe gay rights icon Harvey Milk's name from US naval ship

Leaders in San Francisco are blasting the Trump administration for stripping the name of gay rights activist Harvey Milk from a US naval ship − especially during Pride Month, when people gather to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community. Milk is a revered figure in San Francisco history, a former city supervisor and gay rights advocate who was fatally shot along with Mayor George Moscone in 1978 by disgruntled former supervisor Dan White. Just last month, California marked what would have been Milk's 95 th birthday with proclamations heralding his authenticity, kindness and calls for unity. Milk served for four years in the Navy during the Korean War, before he was forced out for being gay. He later moved to San Francisco, where he became one of the first out gay politicians in the world with his election to the Board of Supervisors in 1977. Cleve Jones, a close friend and LGBTQ+ activist, dismissed the renaming as an attempt by the Trump administration to distract the American public from far more serious concerns, including the ongoing war in Gaza and looming cuts to Medicaid and Social Security. "Yes, this is cruel and petty and stupid, and yes, it's an insult to my community," Jones said. "I would be willing to wager a considerable sum that American families sitting around that proverbial kitchen table this evening are not going to be talking about how much safer they feel now that Harvey's name is going to be taken off that ship." The Pentagon has not confirmed news of the renaming − a highly rare move − but unnamed officials say the change was laid out in an internal memo. It is in keeping with attempts by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and the broader Trump administration to purge all programs, policies, books and social media mentions of references to diversity, equity and inclusion. A new name has not yet been selected for the USNS Harvey Milk. Milk's nephew, Stuart Milk, said in a phone call on Wednesday, June 4, that he and the Harvey Milk Foundation have reached out to the Pentagon, which confirmed there is a proposed name change on the table. "And our hope is that the recommendation is put aside, but if it's not, it will be a rallying cry not just for our community but for all minority communities," said Stuart Milk, who is executive chair of the foundation, adding that his uncle always said that gay rights, and those of other marginalized communities, required constant vigilance. Elected officials, including former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and California Governor Gavin Newsom, called the move a shameful attempt to erase the contributions of LGBTQ+ people and an insult to fundamental American values of honoring veterans and those who worked to build a better country. Pelosi and Newsom are both San Francisco Democrats. Newsom took aim at Hegseth, calling the attempt "A cowardly act from a man desperate to distract us from his inability to lead the Pentagon" on the social platform X. In a statement, San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie said Milk dedicated his life to serving the city and country, and is a role model for all Americans. He did not mention Trump or Hegseth.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store