Tuesday, March 11, 2025 - Leader of the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Francis, hospitalized with pneumonia, is showing slight signs of improvement but it is too early to discuss his return home, reports from the Vatican reveal.
The 88 was admitted to Rome’s Gemelli hospital on February 14 and
suffered a series of breathing crises, the last of which was seven days ago.
Since then, doctors have described his clinical situation as “stable”
and at the weekend said there were “slight improvements… in a complex overall
picture”.
But “it is too soon to talk about his return to Santa Marta”, the guest
house within the tiny city state where the pope lives, a Vatican source said
Monday, March 10.
Francis spent a quiet night in his suite on the 10th floor of the
Gemelli and was spending the day doing physical and respiratory therapy,
according to the Vatican.
As on previous mornings, he also switched from the oxygen mask he uses
nightly to a cannula — a plastic tube tucking into the nostrils — which
delivers high-flow oxygen, it said.
The leader of the world’s nearly 1.4 billion Catholics has been working
on and off, and following the news where possible, including deadly floods that
have hit his homeland of Argentina.
Francis “is close to the people of the Bahia Blanca area in
thought and prayer”, the Vatican said Monday, referring to the port city where
16 people have died.
The pope has suffered a series of health issues in recent years,
from colon surgery in 2021 to a hernia operation in 2023, but this is the
longest and most serious stay in hospital of his papacy
During previous stays, he has appeared on the Gemelli balcony for his
weekly Sunday Angelus prayer.
But on Sunday he missed for the fourth time delivering the traditional Angelus
prayer in person.
He instead issued a written one.
“I too experience the thoughtfulness of service and the tenderness of
care, in particular from the doctors and healthcare workers, whom I thank from
the bottom of my heart,” he said.
Francis has not been seen in person since he was admitted, though he
released a breathless audio message on Thursday thanking people for their
prayers.
On Sunday, some 180 people from dioceses near Milan sat in front of the
hospital to recite prayers together for the pope.
“We said let’s go to the pope, at the Gemelli, and pray for him. He will
not hear us, he will not see us, we won’t see him, but it’s a gesture of
closeness,” 32-year-old priest Marco Ferrari told AFP.
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