We can’t know if Donald Trump has dementia. Even if he did, it wouldn’t excuse his actions

Over recent weeks, speculation has grown about US President Donald Trump’s erratic behaviour during the US-Israel war on Iran.

While questioning Trump’s mental fitness for office, various commentators have suggested he has malignant narcissism, Alzheimer’s disease or frontotemporal dementia, and is experiencing accelerating cognitive decline and a “profound psychological crisis”.

The claim of frontotemporal dementia in particular has stuck. This form of dementia can affect judgement, empathy, language skills and impulse control.

Trump’s critics say frontotemporal dementia explains his escalating threats, profanities and tendency to ramble.

But is frontotemporal dementia really the answer?

Diagnosing someone with this condition from afar is not only irresponsible – it’s impossible. It may also inadvertently give Trump an “out” for offensive but intentional behaviour, while increasing stigma for those who live with dementia.

What is frontotemporal dementia?

Frontotemporal dementia describes a group of neurodegenerative disorders that mostly affect the frontal and temporal lobes of the brain. These are regions involved in behaviour, personality, language and decision-making.

Unlike dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal dementia rarely begins with memory loss. Instead, early symptoms involve changes in social conduct, emotional regulation or language abilities.

There are several variants. The most common is behavioural-variant, which presents as a gradual decline in how a person behaves, interacts with others and expresses their personality.

Frontotemporal dementia is rare. Each year, around two or three out of 100,000 people are diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia worldwide. At any time, roughly nine out of 100,000 people live with the condition.

How is it diagnosed?

Diagnosis is complex and cannot rely on observation alone.

To make a diagnosis, a multidisciplinary team of clinicians will examine the person’s personal and medical history. This includes information from family members, neurological examinations and formal cognitive testing to consider possible diagnoses.

Brain imaging, such as MRI or PET scans, are used to identify changes in the structure and function of the brain. In some cases, genetic testing may be used when family history suggests inherited risk.

A “possible” diagnosis requires someone to demonstrate at least three of six core features. These are:

  • disinhibition
  • apathy
  • loss of empathy
  • compulsive behaviour
  • hyperorality (excessive tendency to examine objects using the mouth)
  • loss of executive functions, the set of cognitive abilities that underpin our ability to plan and make decisions.

Importantly, these features must also show clear progression over time.

But that is only the beginning. To reach a “probable” diagnosis, there must be imaging evidence as well as clear changes in a person’s ability to function independently in daily activities.

A “definite” diagnosis can only be confirmed through genetic testing or brain changes linked to disease. This can only happen after death because it requires physically examining the brain itself.

Even with these criteria, frontotemporal dementia remains one of the most challenging diseases to diagnose accurately. Its symptoms often overlap with psychiatric disorders such as bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and its presentation varies widely between people.

Careful differential diagnosis, which rules out other conditions, is therefore required.

Why we shouldn’t diagnose from a distance

Diagnosing frontotemporal dementia – or any form of dementia – is a complex process. Any “diagnosis” made without meeting the person, or looking at clinical evidence, is just speculation.

But there are other dangers in blaming controversial actions on dementia, such as Trump’s recent threat to wipe out “a whole civilisation” if Iran did not comply with US demands.

First, attributing behaviour we don’t like to dementia reduces accountability for intentional actions.

We know frontotemporal dementia affects brain regions that control impulse and social understanding. It does not explain political extremism, strategic decision-making or ideological conviction – especially where it has been longstanding.

Second, it further stigmatises those who live with the condition, reinforcing the idea that people with dementia are erratic, dangerous or morally compromised.

This stigma remains a major barrier to effective dementia care and prevention. Misconceptions can delay diagnosis, discourage families from seeking help, and make people with dementia feel more isolated.

In frontotemporal dementia, where changes in personality are already misunderstood, the risk of mischaracterisation is particularly acute.

The ethics of restraint

Humans are driven to make sense of troubling events. This negativity bias that has served us well in evolution. But it creates an asymmetry worth noting.

When leaders behave admirably, their actions are rarely attributed to neurological health. But when behaviour is troubling, the impulse to medicalise it can be strong. This selective framing turns diagnosis into a rhetorical tool rather than a clinical question.

The health of political leaders is a legitimate public concern. But there is a difference between evidence-based reporting (grounded in disclosed medical information) and speculative diagnosis based on observation from a distance.

Medical professionals have long recognised this boundary. Ethical guidelines warn against diagnosing individuals without examination, in part because doing so undermines trust in both medicine and the media.

Speculation about dementia may feel like a way of making sense of behaviour that is difficult, unsettling or even morally questionable. But it is a poor substitute for clinical rigour.

For those living with frontotemporal dementia, it risks turning a serious neurological disease into a casual metaphor that explains little and harms a lot.

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Trump news at a glance: Pentagon replaces secretary of the navy amid US blockade in strait of Hormuz | Trump administration

The Pentagon announced on Wednesday that the navy’s top civilian official, John Phelan, the secretary of the navy, is leaving his job. In a statement posted to social media, Sean Parnell, a Pentagon spokesperson, said Phelan was “departing the administration, effective immediately”. Hung Cao, the navy undersecretary, would become acting secretary of the navy, Parnell

Trump attacks undermine the First Amendment

April 22, 2026, 9:16 p.m. ET It is redundant to say that President Donald Trump’s “Truth” Social attacks on Pope Leo are unwarranted and beneath the dignity of the Office of the President, even acknowledging the low bar Trump has established. And of course, Vice President JD Vance’s Pavlovian defense of the comments, and his suggestion

President Trump not too religious, Americans say, survey suggests

April 22, 2026, 7:46 p.m. ET Fewer U.S. adults consider President Donald Trump to be very religious – or religious at all. This finding, outlined in a recent Pew Research Center survey, captures public opinion just prior to the president criticizing Pope Leo XIV, calling him “weak” on crime, and posting an illustration of himself looking

Kremlin says Putin ready to meet Zelenskyy, but only to finalize peace agreements

Burc Eruygur 23 April 2026•Update: 23 April 2026 The Kremlin said Wednesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin is ready to meet Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, but only if such a meeting is to sign peace agreements. In remarks to state media Vesti, spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin has repeatedly emphasized his readiness to meet with

Bigfoot Days Festival, Estes Park, April 25, TV celebrities, Front Range musicians

Something big, hairy, and a little bit scary is coming to Estes Park this weekend. The Bigfoot Days Festival lumbers into town with a lineup that includes TV celebrities, Front Range musicians, and maybe even a few beastly sightings. The festivities kick off Friday evening with the Bigfoot BBQ, a ticketed dinner at the Estes

When fandom shipping turns toxic for celebrities and fans – The Mirror

When McKenna Grace and Mason Thames confirmed their relationship last year, fans celebrated. The two had been shipped for months while filming “Regretting You,” and the pairing actually worked out. It was a feel-good story. But not every ship ends like that. For most celebrities, being paired with a co-star by fans isn’t flattering. It’s

YouTube offers its biometric deepfake detection tool to celebrities

After content creators, politicians and journalists, YouTube will also enable celebrities to access its likeness detection tool, allowing them to remove deepfakes and stop unauthorized impersonation on the platform. YouTube’s biometric likeness technology scans for AI-generated videos that match a verified user’s appearance.  The feature functions similarly to Content ID, a tool that helps detect

Canada’s Carney says US does not ‘dictate’ terms in trade talks

Merve Aydogan 22 April 2026•Update: 22 April 2026 Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney said Wednesday that Washington does not set the terms of ongoing trade negotiations, rejecting the idea that Canada must make concessions to secure a seat at the table. “It’s not a case of the United States dictates the terms,” Carney told reporters

Nikki Glaser reveals gift from Leonardo DiCaprio after Golden Globes

April 22, 2026, 11:09 a.m. ET Thanks to one of her most memorable jokes at the Golden Globes, Nikki Glaser wound up with one box of pasta after another. In an appearance on “The Tonight Show,” the comedian revealed Leonardo DiCaprio sent her “three baskets of pasta” as a thank you gift after she roasted

How Elon Musk has shifted SpaceX’s goals ahead of its IPO

SpaceX seals right to buy coding startup Cursor for $60 billion SpaceX said today that it’s “working closely together” with fast-growing coding startup Cursor “to create the world’s best coding and knowledge work AI.” The post also said SpaceX would have the right to acquire Cursor later this year or make the startup “pay $10

The 25 Greenest Hollywood Celebrities

What lands a star on THR‘s fifth annual list of the 25 Greenest Celebrities? A rap sheet doesn’t hurt. Some of the actors below have been busted more times than Nick Nolte and Randy Quaid combined — Martin Sheen alone has made 66 trips to the pokey in the name of civil disobedience. They’ve also

Putin renames FSB Academy after Felix Dzerzhinsky, founder of Soviet secret police — Meduza

Vladimir Putin has renamed the Federal Security Service Academy in honor of Felix Dzerzhinsky, according to a decree published on the Kremlin’s website. The decree said the honorary designation was conferred in recognition of the academy staff’s service record. The FSB Academy is the main higher-education institution of Russia’s security service. It bore Dzerzhinsky’s name from 1962 to 1993, when it was known as the KGB Higher School

Dreame took on Dyson — now it wants to conquer the world

Many startups spend years trying to become a household name. Others just spend $10 million on a Super Bowl ad. That’s Dreame’s bet. The little-known Chinese robot vacuum company has grand ambitions to become a global consumer electronics giant and chose to run a pricey 30-second spot as its opening move. If it works, the

Mark Carney, the banker for all seasons

Open this photo in gallery: Prime Minister Mark Carney waves following his speech at the Liberal national convention in Montreal on April 11.Christinne Muschi/The Canadian Press John Turley-Ewart is a contributing columnist for The Globe and Mail, a regulatory compliance consultant and a Canadian banking historian. Prime Minister Mark Carney is apparently “a riddle wrapped

Letters to the editor, April 22: ‘Mark Carney has shown that he has the same mettle exhibited by Sir Isaac Brock. That is inspirational leadership’

Open this photo in gallery: Prime Minister Mark Carney responds to a question during Question Period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on April 21.Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press For better or worse Re “A post-Cold War operation kept enriched uranium out of Iran’s hands decades ago” (April 20): Donald Trump’s adventures

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x