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    The White House Doctor: My Patients Were Presidents: A Memoir

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    by Connie Mariano, Bill Clinton (Foreword by)


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    (First Edition)

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    • ISBN-13: 9780312534844
    • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
    • Publication date: 06/07/2011
    • Edition description: First Edition
    • Pages: 320
    • Sales rank: 446,848
    • Product dimensions: 5.36(w) x 8.26(h) x 0.86(d)

    In 1992, DR. CONNIE MARIANO became the first military woman in American history to be appointed White House doctor. The founder of the Center for Executive Medicine, a medical concierge practice providing presidential-quality medical care to CEOs and their families, she now lives in Scottsdale, Arizona.

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    The White House Doctor

    A Memoir


    By Connie Mariano

    St. Martin's Press

    Copyright © 2010 Connie Mariano
    All rights reserved.
    ISBN: 978-1-4299-5852-3



    CHAPTER 1

    Sweet Dreams


    1.

    I never slept with the president. I did sleep with the former president. In fact, I slept with three of them, all at once, on Air Force One. Actually, it was more like a slumber party, which sounds even more bizarre. This all started on a very typical White House day that ended up as anything but typical.

    "Hey, Doc, we've got a tourist down in the State Dining Room."

    I looked up from my computer on the mahogany desk in my office on the ground floor of the White House. The tall dark-haired man standing in my doorway was a Uniformed Division officer of the Secret Service. I recognized the guard's face, but his first name escaped me. Even after seven years at the White House, I couldn't remember the names of all the guards who sat in a post outside my office, the doctor's office, across the hallway from the president's private elevator.

    "Do you want me to call over to the clinic for the duty nurse to respond?" he asked tentatively.

    I stood up, clipped my Secret Service radio to my belt, and inserted my earpiece as I walked around the desk, grabbing the AED, the automated external defibrillator, and my medical bag along the way. "He can back me up, but presidents, visiting dignitaries, kitchen help, and ... tourists get the same treatment."

    Taking care of an ill or injured tourist is one of the first duties a White House physician assumes, even before meeting the first patient, the president of the United States. It was one of the first things I learned to do after arriving at the White House in 1992 as the Navy physician to the White House. It wasn't the first time I had taken care of someone who had passed out. Years of working as a Navy doctor in emergency rooms, clinics, teaching hospitals, and onboard a destroyer tender in the Pacific made me an expert in critical care. What was special this time was the setting: the grandeur and elegance of the State Dining Room of the White House.

    Please don't let anyone die on my watch, I prayed as we rapidly ascended the marble staircase to the State Floor. The medical bag and defibrillator I was carrying were quite heavy. This was going to be my workout for the day: stair climbing and lifting medical bags. No chance for a run on the Mall. I was scheduled to leave in one hour with the president and first lady for an overseas trip.

    I entered the State Dining Room where the line of tourists weaves its way from one end of the room to the other. A gold cordon separates them from the formal dining table in the center of the room, resplendent with a large floral centerpiece, with the chandeliers glittering overhead. The fallen tourist was an elderly, frail woman sitting in a chair in the corner of the room. A woman guard stood beside her. The Secret Service first-aid and trauma — FAT — kit was already on the scene, and the guard was waiting for my cue to administer oxygen. I squatted down beside the woman, looking at her eye to eye. She was approximately eighty years old, wearing glasses, hearing aids, and was sweating profusely. I took her hand in mine and squeezed it gently. It was cold and clammy. My index and third fingers planted themselves on her radial pulse, which was rapid and strong, not thready. I began my routine.

    "Hello, ma'am. I'm the White House doctor. How are you feeling?"

    She looked at me and blinked. "Are you the nurse?" she drawled. Her voice was soft, sweet, and fresh from West Virginia.

    I smiled. "No, ma'am. I'm the doctor, and I'm here to help you. Are you having any chest pain?"

    She squinted behind her glasses. "You're not the nurse?" She examined me closely, trying to comprehend how someone who looks like Connie Chung could be a White House doctor. I suppressed the urge to tell her, "Welcome to the Clinton White House," as I wrapped a blood pressure cuff around her arm.

    "Ma'am, are you a diabetic?" I asked as I pumped the blood pressure cuff.

    "No, no diabetes."

    Her blood pressure was 110/60 and her pulse was 80 and regular. Respirations were 20, unlabored. I looked up to a woman in her fifties standing behind the chair, who had identified herself as the daughter of the elderly tourist. "Does your mother take any medications for blood pressure, diabetes, or heart disease?"

    She shook her head. "No. No medications at all."

    "What happened to her this morning?" I asked.

    "She was so excited about coming to see the White House that she skipped breakfast. Then we waited in line for an hour. By the time we got upstairs, she said she was sleepy and then she broke out in a sweat."

    I looked at the guard and before I could say "OJ please," a White House usher had brought a glass of fresh orange juice on a silver tray.

    "Ma'am, we're going to give you a sip of orange juice, okay?"

    She nodded, accepting the glass and drinking it quickly. She patted her lips with a napkin the usher had handed her. She then noticed the embossed gold presidential seal on the napkin, and placed it surreptitiously in her pocket.

    By now the White House nurse on duty had arrived. It was tall, brown-haired, all-American Jim Hosack carrying his medical bag. He hunched down beside me, looking guilty, and confessed in a hushed tone, "Sorry, Captain, I was delayed. We were swamped in the clinic."

    "I think our patient is going to be okay," I reassured him. "She's a little hypoglycemic. Blood pressure and pulse are stable. I'm going to turn her over to you."

    Suddenly, my radio blared — I had taken out my earpiece to attend to my patient. "All points on Oscar ...Eagle moving ..." Eagle was the Secret Service code name for President Bill Clinton. Oscar was the name of the Secret Service frequency. The voice was one of the president's agents reporting Bill Clinton's movements on the White House compound.

    Jim looked up at me. "The funeral?"

    I nodded. Jim tentatively asked, "With all the presidents?" I smiled. I could see intimidation in his eyes. That was why I was taking Vince Starks, the senior White House nurse, with me. He understood: they were just patients. As I walked away, I could hear Jim introduce himself to our elderly patient.

    "Oh, so you're the doctor?"

    As I hurried back to my office, I checked my watch. It was twenty minutes before we were to lift from the South Lawn on Marine One. The helicopter had not even arrived. Then I heard over my radio, "Eagle moving." "Eagle moving" meant Eagle was on the move, going somewhere. But where? "Eagle moving to the residence," someone said over the radio, as though he had heard my question.

    I now heard the muffled sound of Marine One's rotors as it touched down on the South Lawn. My ride had arrived. The helicopter would shortly take the president to Andrews Air Force Base. He was preparing to depart the White House and I, his physician, was to accompany him. As I approached my office, I asked the Secret Service agents across the hallway near the president's elevator, "What gives? Are we going early?" They smiled and shrugged their shoulders; so much for Secret Service intelligence.

    I stepped into my office, wondering how soon before we would depart to Andrews. The president could be upstairs for a minute or he could decide to leave in an hour. The Secret Service doesn't know. How could I have not predicted that President Clinton would be true to form: predictably unpredictable!

    But I had my own spy network: the president's Filipino valets. I went to my computer and text-paged Master Chief Joe Fama, one of the president's valets, with the message, "When is departure? Doc M."

    No sooner had I struck the send key when my phone rang. I picked it up and it was Joe: "Doc, POTUS wants to leave in ten minutes," he announced, from POTUS's (President of the United States) lips to Joe's ears. The president's valet was among the most trusted and reliable of sources. Everyone at the White House knew it. Even Ken Starr knew it.

    I walked out into the hallway, grinning like Socks the cat because I now had something that everyone on the eighteen acres of the White House coveted: the scoop. The military aide on duty had just arrived in the hallway now. We called him (or her) the "mil aide." One is assigned each day to follow the president and carries the black briefcase called the "football" that contains the nuclear codes.

    The mil aide on duty today would also be accompanying the president on our overseas trip. He was in full dress uniform, perspiring and breathing rapidly. The military aide was not cool; he didn't have the scoop. I walked over to him. He greeted me formally, "Hello, Captain Mariano."

    I smiled back and tested him. "Any word about departure?"

    He wiped his brow with a white handkerchief and then answered, "No, ma'am."

    "Oh," I remarked. "The president's valet just called me and said that POTUS wants to leave in ten minutes." The mil aide's mood brightened when he realized that I had just given him the scoop. You've got to have the scoop to be in the loop. And being in the loop is something military aides crave.

    "Per the valet, POTUS wants to depart in ten minutes," he announced into his radio with an air of authority. The Secret Service, White House communications, Marine One pilots, and military personnel who monitor the Secret Service frequency heard the announcement. The Secret Service agents standing in the hallway beside us gave the mil aide the thumbs-up. The approval went to his sweaty head, and he began to strut around like he was the man. Then he caught himself as he saw me observing him. He whispered to me, avoiding eye contact, "Uh, thanks, ma'am."

    "Don't mention it, Major," I whispered back to him knowingly.


    2.

    "Eagle and Evergreen. South Lawn," reported the SAIC, the president's special agent in charge, into his sleeve microphone as President and Mrs. Clinton stepped from the Diplomatic Reception Room onto the South Lawn. They were greeted by a thousand points of light from the camera crews positioned on the west side of the South Portico. I trailed behind them, trying to be invisible as I gingerly stepped onto the moist green lawn. Stay out of the shot and don't trip, I reminded myself. Stay out of the picture is what we are told on day one of our arrival at the White House. The commandment handed down from the White House Military Office is: Thou shalt be invisible. It was an easy edict for me to follow. Growing up as the Filipino daughter of a Navy steward, invisibility was embedded in my DNA.

    The rear hatch of Marine One closed with a loud thump. I took my seat on the cushioned bench opposite the hatch, wrapping my woolen navy blue coat around me, shivering. The SAIC sat in the jump seat across from me. He slid on the headphones that allowed him to talk with the Marine One pilots in the cockpit. Looking in my direction, the SAIC must've noticed me bundled up in my coat. "Doc's cold back here. Can you turn up the heat?" he asked the pilots. In a minute, the compartment began to heat up as we lifted from the South Lawn.

    I looked toward the front of the helicopter at the president and first lady. They sat facing each other in royal blue cloth seats each bearing the presidential seal, reading their respective briefing materials. The president's personal aide and the national security advisor were on the opposite bench, each reviewing the trip books that outline the president's itinerary. I gazed out the window as Marine One lifted from the South Lawn. It was twilight now, and the red lights from the top of the Washington Monument blinked in a pulselike beat. As Marine One banked south, we flew close enough that I could almost touch it. I realized how very few people had the privilege of seeing this structure so close in the air and from the presidential helicopter no less. A sense of awe and appreciation overcame me as the helicopter made its way across the Tidal Basin.

    I gazed out onto the Potomac as we flew toward Andrews Air Force Base. I thought about how quickly this trip had been scheduled and arranged. King Hussein of Jordan had just died and as it's often said at the White House: you die, we fly. This meant Air Force One was prepared to fly the president to the state funeral in Amman, Jordan. Onboard the presidential aircraft would be President and Mrs. Clinton, senior White House staff, State Department officers, Secret Service, White House press, and members of my White House Medical Unit. This journey was particularly special because of three additional passengers: the former presidents George H. W. Bush, Jimmy Carter, and Gerald Ford. I was looking forward to seeing President George Bush, who had been my first "first patient" when I arrived at the White House in 1992. I had also previously met President Carter during one of President Clinton's trips. And I had dined with President Ford at a symposium at Wake Forest University a few years ago.

    Fifteen minutes after leaving the White House, Marine One touched down at Andrews. President and Mrs. Clinton departed the helicopter from the front steps. The camera crew on the tarmac filmed the arrival and the president's dignified stroll to the 747's steps. Meanwhile, at the back of the helicopter, two Filipino valets, Fred Sanchez and Lito Bautista, were off-loading the president's and first lady's luggage. As I lugged my medical bag, defibrillator, and briefcase off the chopper, I patted Fred and Lito on the back. They smiled at me. I evaded the camera lens as I briskly walked toward the rear steps of the plane.

    I loved Air Force One, which had become my home away from the White House. As I moved forward toward the medical compartment at the front of the plane, I passed the press section and waved to the seated White House press corps reporters; several waved back. One reporter asked, "Hey, Doc, can we drink the water over there?"

    "Bottled water and plenty of it," I advised him.

    I walked past the compartment where the Secret Service detail sat and noticed an agent had fallen asleep in his chair even before we had taken off. This hastily arranged overseas trip had everybody working late hours, especially the Secret Service. But once we were airborne, they would at least get a ten-hour break. Some sooner than others.

    In the next compartment that manifested the White House staff, one of the advance office staffers asked me for a sleeping pill. I advised her to see me in the medical compartment during the flight. As I passed each compartment, I reviewed the passenger manifest in my mind. All the people onboard were also potential patients for me.

    When I reached the medical compartment, Timmy Kerwin, the chief flight attendant, stepped over. Cheerful in his blue vest with flight wings insignia and his name engraved in gold on the front, he was youthful in appearance despite his twenty-five-plus years in the Air Force.

    "Hello, Doc. We got everybody onboard, including the three presidents. They're in the senior staff compartment." He nodded to the next compartment down from us.

    "Where are they going to sleep?" I asked. I knew that beds were at a premium on Air Force One. There were two beds in the president's cabin in the forward compartment. The only other decent beds were here in medical, two single-mattress bunk racks folded into the wall. These were designed to fold out for a patient who needed to be monitored or treated. If there were no patients, I would usually sleep in one of them on long trips. But I was willing to surrender my bunk bed to a former leader of the free world.

    Timmy responded, "I've manifested the three presidents in the senior staff compartment."

    This space held three large-size reclining passenger seats. These leather chairs were comfortable but did not allow the passenger to lie flat. As I tried to visualize our distinguished guests trying to sleep in these seats, Timmy proudly added, "I also got three brand-new sleeping bags from Walmart just in case."

    The image of a presidential slumber party on the floor of the senior staff compartment jarred me. "Timmy, I can't imagine them lying on the floor in sleeping bags. Say I'm offering them the two bunk racks and the reclining chair in the medical compartment."

    Timmy smiled and ran off to inform the presidents of this invitation.

    As I stepped inside, I was met by a tall, handsome African American man in scrubs. Navy Lieutenant Vince Starks greeted me with a tired "Good evening, ma'am. I got the blood in the belly of the plane." For overseas trips, the White House Medical Unit carried several units of blood reserved for the president and first lady in the case of a medical emergency. This was stored in portable containers in the belly of the aircraft during flight.

    Vince Starks, the senior White House nurse out of six, was the most experienced in terms of training and length of White House duty. Because of the short notice and our special passengers, I wanted Vince to assist me in case of an emergency in the air or in Amman.


    (Continues...)

    Excerpted from The White House Doctor by Connie Mariano. Copyright © 2010 Connie Mariano. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
    All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
    Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments ix

    Foreword Former President Bill Clinton xiii

    1 Sweet Dreams 1

    2 Destined for Duty 13

    3 The Steward's Daughter 26

    4 The President Will See You Now 43

    5 One of the Guys 60

    6 The New Face of the White House 72

    7 Change Is Our Friend 85

    8 The Presidential Road Show 103

    9 Life in the Kill Zone 122

    10 The King and I 135

    11 The White House Bag Lady 156

    12 The House of Sorrow 174

    13 Rough Seas Ahead 191

    14 Eye of the Storm 208

    15 It Takes a Village 223

    16 My First Family 244

    17 A Star Is Worn 260

    18 Doctor's Progress Notes 278

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    A riveting look into the personal lives of our presidents through the eyes of their White House doctor

    "An interesting, behind-the-scenes glimpse of life at the White House." - Kirkus Reviews

    Dr. Connie Mariano served 9 years at the White House under Presidents George H.W. Bush, William J. Clinton, and George W. Bush. She participated in world headline-making news events and traveled all over the world. She cared for visiting dignitaries and was charged with caring for all the members of the First Family. From flirting with King Juan Carlos of Spain to spending the night on the Queen of England's yacht, Dr. Mariano glimpsed a glittering and powerful celebrity that few ever see.

    White House Doctor is a fascinating look into what goes on behind closed doors at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

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    Aaron Leitko
    …provides a peek into the tedium of treating the president's every cough, sniffle and golf-course-induced blister. And then some.
    —The Washington Post
    Kirkus Reviews
    A memoir by a Navy physician whose patients were U.S. presidents and their families. Rising up the ranks from captain to rear admiral during her service at the White House, Dr. Mariano was the first woman and first Filipino-American to become the physician to a president and the director of the White House medical unit. She writes of her experiences with humor and justifiable pride. This is no fly-on-the-wall tell-all, although she does comment on the "tall, slender, long-haired beauties" who used to preen in front of President Clinton-they were called "POTUS bait" by the staff. While there were only minor alarms and excitements during her nine years on the job-Bush I's last year and Clinton's two terms-she faced some challenging moments and passed with flying colors through tough security-training exercises, countermanding her former boss's instructions when he refused to relinquish his job and brushing off snide remarks that she benefited from a personal relationship with the president. Though she was the "wrong sex, wrong color, even wrong height [and] didn't look like the stereotypical White House doctor," Mariano persevered, with special help from the "silent servant class at the White House . . . the people of every day attended to the leader of the free world in his private quarters." As director of the medical unit, she instituted a number of changes to improve the standard of care, including 24/7 on-site medical staffing and updated treatment protocols. She traveled with more than 130 overseas presidential trips and many times worked grueling hours, making the painful choice to sacrifice her own family time to serve two first families. Her retirement from the Navy in 2001 wassimultaneously a time of celebration and sadness. An interesting, behind-the-scenes glimpse of life at the White House. Launch party in Washington, D.C. Agent: Susan Crawford/Crawford Literary Agency
    Publishers Weekly
    This doctor is a bit of a celebrity herself: the first military woman in U.S. history to be appointed White House doctor, the first female director of the White House medical unit, and the first Filipino-American to become a navy rear admiral. And though Mariano humbly bows to the bigger-than-life presidents—George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton—she cared for during eight years in Washington, it's her journey that's so remarkable. Having begun life in 1955 as the daughter of a U.S. Navy steward in the Philippines, she was appointed a White House physician by the navy in 1992, and her mettle was thoroughly tested during medical emergencies—and political storms. Whether helping to treat Bush's skin cancer or dispensing a Band-Aid on the golf course, accompanying the president on overseas trips or performing a Heimlich maneuver on a choking guest at a holiday gala, Mariano always kept her cool and her sense of humor, which she retains in this unusual inside look at the White House. 8 pages of color photos. (June 22)

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