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Coronavirus: Trump tests negative for COVID-19 after potential exposures

Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: Trump takes COVID-19 test as virus spreads in the U.S.'
Coronavirus outbreak: Trump takes COVID-19 test as virus spreads in the U.S.
WATCH: Trump takes COVID-19 test as virus spreads in the U.S – Mar 14, 2020

WASHINGTON —  Donald Trump’s doctor says the president’s test for the new coronavirus has come back negative.

Dr. Sean P. Conley said in a statement on Saturday evening that Trump remains symptom free.

The White House has stepped up precautions around Trump following his repeated direct and indirect exposures to the new coronavirus.

Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: Brazilian President Bolsonaro says he tested negative for COVID-19'
Coronavirus outbreak: Brazilian President Bolsonaro says he tested negative for COVID-19

On Saturday afternoon, Trump told reporters at a White House briefing that he had his temperature taken and it was “totally normal” before stepping into the room to discuss the government’s efforts to halt the spread of the virus. The pandemic has now infected more than 2,200 people in the U.S. and caused at least 50 deaths.

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Trump had held out on testing for days — concerned that it would make him appear weak — despite his interactions with at least three people who have since tested positive for COVID-19. Trump had said Friday that he would “most likely” submit to testing “fairly soon,” but the White House doctor said in a memo released shortly before midnight that no test was called for, despite the contact, because he wasn’t exhibiting symptoms like a fever or cough.

Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: Trump takes COVID-19 test as virus spreads in the U.S.'
Coronavirus outbreak: Trump takes COVID-19 test as virus spreads in the U.S.

The president said he’d gone ahead with it anyway after repeated questions from reporters at a news conference Friday and would have the results in “a day or two days, whatever it is.” Vice-President Mike Pence, speaking at the same briefing, said he and his wife, Karen Pence, would also “be more than happy to be tested,” despite the doctors’ guidance, and would be contacting White House medical staff to arrange it.

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Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: Trump confirms he took COVID-19 test, says he’s ‘never believed in hand shaking’'
Coronavirus outbreak: Trump confirms he took COVID-19 test, says he’s ‘never believed in hand shaking’

Multiple lawmakers and countless citizens across the country who have had the same degree of exposure have not only tried to get tested, but also chosen to quarantine themselves as a precaution and to avoid potentially infecting others.

The president, according to two people close to the White House, had been reluctant to take the test for fear it would project weakness or worry. Trump has wanted to appear in full control during the crisis, and had expressed concerns that taking personal steps could undermine that appearance.

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But as the White House grapples with repeated exposures by Trump and multiple senior aides, it has tightened precautions. On Saturday, the White House announced that it is now conducting temperature checks on anyone who is in close contact with Trump and Pence, including reporters who attended the Saturday White House briefing.

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Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: Pence confirms travel ban will be extended to include Ireland, U.K.'
Coronavirus outbreak: Pence confirms travel ban will be extended to include Ireland, U.K.

To that end, a representative from the White House physician’s office took the temperature of members of the media at the briefing, going around and putting the device to their heads. One reporter with a suspected elevated temperature was not allowed in.

Trump, 73, is considered to be at higher risk of complications from the disease because of his age. He has long tried to minimize the threat posed by the virus and continued to engage in behaviours that health officials are warning the public against.

On Friday, Trump shook the hands of multiple officials at his Rose Garden news conference and he has continued to appear at large gatherings despite tweeting Saturday morning that Americans should be practicing “SOCIAL DISTANCING!”

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“It almost becomes a habit,” Trump said when asked why he continues to shake hands contrary to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines.

“People come up to me, they shake hands, they put their hand out, it’s sort of a natural reflex.,” he said. “We’re all getting out of it. All of us have that problem.” He added: “Shaking hands is not a great thing to be doing right now, I agree.”

Trump has now had multiple direct and indirect contacts with people who have since tested positive for the virus, including three people he spent time with last weekend at his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida.

Click to play video: 'Coronavirus outbreak: Trump unhappy with fed chair, says he should be ‘much more proactive’'
Coronavirus outbreak: Trump unhappy with fed chair, says he should be ‘much more proactive’

The Brazilian Embassy in Washington said late Friday that the country’s charge d’affaires, Nestor Forster, tested positive after sitting at Trump’s dinner table. So, too, have a top aide to Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, who took a photo with Trump and attended a party with him, and another person who attended a campaign fundraiser with the president that Sunday, according to two Republican officials who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss private health matters.

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Several top administration officials, including Attorney General William Barr and Trump’s daughter and senior adviser, Ivanka Trump, also met last week with an Australian Cabinet minister who on Friday was confirmed positive.

The White House has been saying, citing CDC guidelines, that the president and other White House officials don’t need to be tested or isolate themselves unless they are exhibiting symptoms, even though that advice is contradicted by many health professionals who note that the virus can be spread even by people who are asymptomatic.

The reporter who was not allowed into the White House briefing Saturday had a temperature above the 100.4-degree guidelines in three checks over 15 minutes, tweeted Pence’s spokeswoman, Katie Miller, citing the White House Medical Unit.

Public health officials say that people with a cough and elevated temperatures of 100.4 degrees or higher are deemed concerning.

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