U.S. President Donald Trump said in a Truth Social post Saturday that he would deploy a hospital ship to Greenland, alleging many people there are sick and not receiving care, even though both of the U.S. Navyâs hospital ships are undergoing maintenance at a shipyard in Alabama.
The announcement prompted a defense of Greenlandâs health care system from its prime minister in the latest point of friction with Trump, who has frequently talked about seizing Greenland, which is a semiautonomous territory of NATO ally Denmark.
Here is a closer look at the facts:
Trump claims there is widespread illness
Referring to his special envoy to the Arctic territory, Trump said, âWorking with the fantastic Governor of Louisiana, Jeff Landry, we are going to send a great hospital boat to Greenland to take care of the many people who are sick, and not being taken care of there.â
THE FACTS: There have been no reports of major illnesses in Greenland lately and it was not clear which sickness Trump was referring to.
All of Greenland, which has a population of around 57,000 people, is served by the Queen Ingrid Hospital in the capital Nuuk, according to the Danish Medical Journal. The territory also has several regional health centers.
Most health care services in Greenland are free for citizens and permanent residents. This includes treatment by general practitioners, medical specialists and hospitals, health centers, prescription medicine, public dental care and home nursing care, according to the website of the Nordic Council of Ministers, which is the official body for intergovernmental cooperation in the Nordic Region.
In response to Trumpâs post, Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen stressed the regionâs free health care system and pointed out the differences in a gibe at the U.S. system.
âWe have a public health care system where treatment is free for citizens. That is a deliberate choice â and a fundamental part of our society,â Nielsen said. âThat is not how it works in the USA, where it costs money to see a doctor.â
Despite free health service, there are âmajor public health challengesâ on the vast island, according to the Center for Public Health in Greenland.
Many of those challenges are related to undergoing âprofound changes from a hunting society to a modern industrial and knowledge societyâ within a short period of time. Increasingly, people suffer from illnesses such as obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
Anna Wangenheim, Greenlandâs minister for health and persons with disabilities, recently posted an âurgentâ request on her Facebook page saying the ânational health service currently needs dentists for 3 different towns: Aasiaat, Paamiut, and Nanortalik.â
Despite difficult access to medical services in remote areas and a shortage of staff, notable improvements have been achieved in Greenland, which only assumed political responsibility for its own healthcare system in 1992, said Lene SeibĂŚk, a professor at the Institute of Health and Nature at the University of Greenland.
âIn 2020, life expectancy in Greenland was approximately 71 years for men and 77 years for women, representing an increase of approximately six years for men and five to six years for women since the 1990s and exceeding the global average,â SeibĂŚk added.
Trump claims US hospital ship already headed to Greenland
âItâs on the way!!!â Trump wrote in his Truth Social post, saying one of the hospital ships already was headed to Greenland.
THE FACTS: The USNS Mercy and USNS Comfort are at a shipyard in Mobile, Alabama, according to social media posts from the shipyard showing the pair of white hospital ships alongside each other in late January. Publicly available ship tracking data show both ships are still in the shipyard.
The Comfort arrived at the shipyard in the southern state on Jan. 23 and is expected to remain there through April, according to the government contract for the work.
Repairs to the Mercy, which arrived there in August, have run past their expected completion date. Government contract records show the ship is slated for more repairs in March in a shipyard in the northwest state of Oregon.
Should either ship be rushed out, it would need additional time before being ready to deploy. The standard crew of a U.S. hospital ship does not include the full complement of medical staff needed to man the vast medical facilities, which include 12 operating rooms and 1,000 hospital beds. Normally, the ships would draw doctors, nurses, corpsmen and supplies from hospitals surrounding their home ports of either Norfolk, Virginia, or San Diego before setting sail.
Trumpâs envoy claims there is a service shortage
Landry, the Louisiana governor serving as Trumpâs special envoy, echoed the presidentâs claim Sunday on X that âmany villages and small towns lack basic services that Americans often take for granted.â
Landry added that âsmall settlements are without permanent doctors, diagnostic tools, or specialist care â forcing residents to travel great distances for vital treatments that should be available at home.â
THE FACTS: While medical service is sometimes not physically available in all settlements of the vast territory, telemedicine plays an important role for people living remotely.
Patients in areas without the necessary health care also can be transported to the national hospital or regional facilities. In complex cases, patients can be flown to Denmark for medical treatment with the government paying for transportation and treatment.
Rural Americans, in comparison, have long faced challenges in accessing critical health care, in part due to financial inequities and long travel times. The barriers have worsened in the past decade as more maternity wards close, pharmacies struggle to stay in business and rural hospitals and clinics brace for federal Medicaid cuts.
Since 2010, 152 rural hospitals, many in the southern U.S., have cut inpatient services or closed entirely, according to data from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The expansion of telehealth can ease some inequities, experts say, but it is not a universal solution while many rural areas face provider shortages and unreliable broadband.
Landryâs state is no exception. Most of Louisianaâs parishes are fully or partially rural and 73% of residents live in areas without enough primary care providers, 86% without enough dental providers and 93% without sufficient mental health providers, according to the stateâs health department.
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Grieshaber reported from Berlin, Toropin from Washington, D.C., and Shastri from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
