Pope Francis to stay in hospital for at least another week

Pontiff is not ‘in danger of death’ but ‘not yet out of danger’ as chronic illness remains

Pope Francis, who is in hospital with double pneumonia, is showing signs of improvement, the Vatican said. Photograph: Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images
Pope Francis, who is in hospital with double pneumonia, is showing signs of improvement, the Vatican said. Photograph: Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images

Pope Francis, who is in hospital undergoing treatment for double pneumonia, is “not yet out of danger” and will remain in hospital for at least the whole of next week, one of his doctors has said.

The pope (88), was stable but “the chronic illness remains”, Sergio Alfieri, a general surgeon at Rome’s Gemelli university hospital, told reporters on Friday.

“Is he out of danger? No. But if the question is ‘Is he in danger of death?’, the answer is [also] ‘No’,” Dr Alfieri said, adding that the pope was aware of how serious the situation was. “The pope knows this. He said: ‘I realise that the situation is serious’,” he said.

The pontiff was hospitalised last Friday after suffering from what he said was bronchitis for more than a week. He was later diagnosed with a respiratory tract infection and pneumonia on both lungs, a combination which doctors said made his therapeutic treatment more complex.

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The pope was “in good humour”, Dr Alfieri said, and on Friday visited the hospital’s chapel to pray. He was also able to do some work, but his health condition can “change day to day” and so he will remain in hospital “at least” through the whole of next week.

Pope Francis in hospital with double pneumonia but improving, Vatican saysOpens in new window ]

The pope is taking a “significant” medication load and won’t be discharged until he is fully out of the woods, because if he returns home, “he will just start working again”, said Dr Alfieri. “We need to focus on getting through this phase ... the pope is not a person who gives up.”

Alfieri said the pope was “a fragile patient” given his previous health concerns. However, he stressed that the pontiff was “not attached to any machinery” and when he needed to, he put on the nasal cannula “for a little oxygen”, but he otherwise “breathes spontaneously and feeds himself”.

He said the pope did not have sepsis, a potentially life-threatening condition when a body responds to an infection by harming its own tissue and organs. However, he said there was always a risk that the infection could spread.

Pope Francis had part of his lung removed in his early 20s while he was training to be a priest in his native Argentina.

Prior to his hospitalisation, the pope maintained an intense schedule, especially with events related to the Catholic jubilee year.

He has suffered ill health in recent years and was admitted to hospital in March 2023 for what was initially said to be bronchitis but later diagnosed as pneumonia. He also underwent a colon operation in June 2021.

The pope has often been seen using a wheelchair or with a walking stick as a result of sciatic nerve pain and a knee problem. – Guardian