Notable Precedents for Presidential Candidates' Health Disclosures

Clinton's recent health scare contributes to Trump narrative about her fitness.

Beyond that, the level of transparency over the years has differed by campaigns.

Present-Day Precedent

In recent years, candidates have operated with an understanding that they should disclose details, but their individual health appeared to dictate how much information to share with the public.

In 2008, then-Sen. Barack Obama released a 276-word statement by his longtime physician indicating he was in excellent health.

"I was derided for issuing such a brief report, but there was nothing of significance in the medical history of this healthy, 47-year-old male," Dr. David Scheiner wrote in The Washington Post Friday.

During the 2008 race, those disclosures came in May for both Obama and McCain.

White House Weighs In

During a news briefing today, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said individual candidates "have to decide for themselves" whether they will release information about their health.

"Obviously, the requirement that the American people have some understanding of the health of their president is, I think, a pretty commonsense proposition,” he said. “But for individual candidates, they, ultimately, have to make a decision on their own about what kind of information and what kind of detail about their health they're prepared to disclose.”

Earnest said that questions regarding a presidential candidate's health are "entirely legitimate questions but how they're answered is something that individual candidates have to decide for themselves."

A Different Clinton's Take

At the time, he made it clear that he supports the public's interest in the health status of a candidate.

"The public has a right to know the condition of the president's health," he said during the interview.

Among the details were tidbits about how Clinton is allergic to cat dander (even though they had a family cat, Socks), smoke (even though he smoked a pipe while at Oxford University), and used a wedge to raise the head of his bed ("no question, it helps”).

When Presidents Held Back

But there are other presidents who hid the extent of their ailments.

The clearest example is President Franklin D. Roosevelt, when he was suffering from congestive heart failure, hypertension, acute bronchitis and pulmonary disease while running for a fourth term in 1944, according to the BBC, and his doctor wrote a letter saying Roosevelt's health was strong even though he died shortly after being elected.

ABC News’ Arlette Saenz contributed to this story.