What happened Pope Francis's respiratory tract infection is presenting a "complex clinical situation" and the 88-year-old pontiff will remain in hospital for as long as necessary, said the Vatican yesterday.
Who said what Vatican spokesperson Matteo Bruni said recent tests indicated that the Pope, who was admitted to Rome's Gemelli Hospital on Friday, is suffering from a polymicrobial respiratory tract infection. Scientists say polymicrobial diseases are caused by a mix of viruses, bacteria, fungi and parasites.
"Public concern over his condition (is) growing," said The Guardian. To help assuage those fears, the Vatican clarified yesterday that the Pope's condition was "stable" and that he did not have a fever.
Francis had part of one lung removed when he was young due to a pulmonary infection and is "prone to bouts of bronchitis in winter", said the Associated Press. But his current hospital stay has "revived concerns about the health of the pontiff", who has also fallen twice in his suite in recent weeks.
The Pope now often uses a wheelchair or walker when seen in public. He said in a new autobiography that he was well, but "the reality is, quite simply, that I am old". He added: "The church is governed using the head and the heart, not the legs."
What next? The Pope's general audience on Wednesday has been cancelled. No precise time frame has been given for his hospital treatment, which has already sidelined Francis for longer than a 2023 admission for pneumonia. |