
Mitch McConnell's Health Update Reveals a 7-Minute Window on the Morning He Was Rushed to Hospital
Mitch McConnell's latest health update leaves unanswered questions as dispatch records shed new light on the minutes before he was rushed to the hospital.
Senator Mitch McConnell is continuing to recover in the hospital, but the latest update from his office has done little to answer the central question surrounding his June 14 hospitalization: What happened that morning?

Sen. Mitch McConnell's office says he is continuing to improve while recovering in the hospital. However, it has not said what caused the medical emergency that led to his hospitalization. | Source: Getty Images
The Emergency Response Timeline
In its most recent statement, McConnell's office said the 84-year-old Kentucky Republican "continues to improve" and remains engaged with his staff on Kentucky and Senate matters while recovering.
Beyond that, aides have not disclosed what caused his hospitalization or the treatment he is receiving, and a spokesman has referred subsequent questions back to the same statement.
The limited information has shifted attention to emergency communications reviewed by The New York Times, which document the first moments of the medical response.
The recordings capture a seven-minute window of what transpired that morning.

Emergency dispatch records show what happened during the seven minutes before Mitch McConnell was taken to the hospital. The recordings document the response between 8:36 a.m. and 8:43 a.m., offering the clearest public timeline of that morning. | Source: Getty Images
According to the dispatch records, emergency crews were first sent to McConnell's Washington residence at 8:36 a.m. after receiving a report of an unconscious person.
About six minutes later, a Fire and Emergency Medical Services worker radioed that "CPR in progress."
By 8:43 a.m., dispatchers had upgraded the response to a cardiac arrest call as emergency personnel continued coordinating their efforts.
The recordings do not identify McConnell by name, and his office has declined to comment on them. For now, the dispatch communications remain the most detailed public account of the emergency response before the longtime senator was hospitalized.
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