Ailing Pope Francis thanks doctors as condition improves
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Nuns pray outside the Gemelli Hospital, where Pope Francis is hospitalised, on March 9.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
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VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis, who the Vatican said is responding well to treatment for pneumonia, thanked his doctors and healthcare workers on March 9 as he missed delivering a fourth straight Angelus prayer in person.
The 88-year-old, in Rome’s Gemelli hospital since Feb 14
“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.
“We need this, the ‘miracle of tenderness’ which accompanies those who are in adversity, bringing a little light into the night of pain,” he said in the text published by the Vatican.
The leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics has spent time at the Gemelli before, notably for colon surgery in 2021 and a hernia operation in 2023.
This hospitalisation has been more serious, however, with Pope Francis suffering several respiratory crises, prompting fears the road to recovery would be long, or might force the elderly pontiff to resign.
On March 8, the Vatican said the Pope appeared finally to be responding well to treatment and had seen “a gradual, slight improvement”, marking several days without crises.
Though the Pope does not have a fever, his doctors want to see more positive results “in the coming days” before giving a prognosis, an evening medical bulletin said.
On March 9, the Vatican press office said the Pope was “stable”.
“The doctors confirmed the situation remains the same as yesterday,” and the Pope had seen “slight improvements... in a complex overall picture”, it said.
The next bulletin is expected on March 10 afternoon.
‘Given so much’
Pope Francis has been alternating rest, prayer and bits of work when he feels up to it.
On March 9 he received Italian Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s secretary of state, and Edgar Pena Parra, a Venezuelan archbishop who is also a senior Vatican official.
Cardinal Pietro Parolin (second from left) leads a Holy Mass at the St Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City, on March 8.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
He continued his treatment, doing both his physiotherapy and his breathing exercises, the press office said.
Pope Francis also followed spiritual exercises being held at the Vatican via video link, though while he could see participants, they could not see the Pope, it said.
People who gathered in St Peter’s Square on March 9, where Pope Francis would usually stand at a Vatican window to read the Angelus to crowds below, said his presence was sorely missed.
“He is a wonderful person who has given so much and I hope that he can return as soon as possible”, said Ms Diana Desiderio, who volunteers with the civil protection agency in the Italian city of Pescara.
She and fellow volunteers are praying that Pope Francis will “return to the window again and bring peace and serenity to everyone, because we need it”, she told AFP.
The Pope ended the Angelus with his traditional call for peace in conflicts, “in particular in tormented Ukraine, Palestine, Israel, Lebanon, Myanmar, Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo”.
He said he had “learnt with concern of the resumption of violence in some areas of Syria: I hope that they cease definitively, with full respect for all ethnic and religious components of society”.
Catholics have also been gathering at the Gemelli hospital to pray for Pope Francis or leave flowers, candles and cards.
Mr Giuseppe Antonio Perazzo, 74, was at the hospital for the second Sunday in a row, dressed smartly in a suit and tie in the hope that the pontiff might appear at the window.
A sign he propped up in sight of the windows of the Pope’s rooms urged the Argentine pontiff – a notoriously headstrong patient – to “keep doing what the doctors and nurses tell you to do”. AFP

