Pope Francis must relearn to speak after oxygen therapy, cardinal says

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A person holding a picture of Pope Francis prays for the 88-year-old pontiff outside Rome's Gemelli hospital, where he is being treated.

A person holding a picture of Pope Francis prays for the 88-year-old pontiff outside Rome's Gemelli hospital, where he is being treated.

PHOTO: AFP

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ROME - Pope Francis is slowly regaining his strength in hospital but must “relearn to speak” after prolonged use of high-flow oxygen therapy, Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernandez said on March 21.

The cardinal, who is the head of the Vatican's doctrinal office, dismissed speculation that the pontiff would retire and said he was returning to his old self.

“The Pope is doing very well, but high-flow oxygen dries everything out. He needs to relearn how to speak, but his overall physical condition is as it was before,” Cardinal Fernandez said, at a presentation of a new book by Francis on poetry.

The 88-year-old Pope has been hospitalised for five weeks suffering from double pneumonia, during which time the Vatican has

released just one brief audio

of him speaking, on March 6, when his voice was broken, breathless and hard to understand.

In its latest health update released on March 21, the Vatican said the Pope’s condition remained stable with “minor improvements in breathing and mobility”.

It confirmed he had

not used mechanical ventilation for help with breathing

at night since March 17, but was rather receiving oxygen via a small hose under his nose for much of the time.

There is still no official word on when he might return home to the Vatican and Cardinal Fernandez said he did not know if he would be discharged in time for Easter, which falls on April 20.

“He could return, but the doctors want to be 100 per cent sure because he believes that with the little time he has left, he wants to dedicate himself entirely to others, not to himself,” Cardinal Fernandez said.

Asked if he thought Francis might step down, the cardinal said: “I really don’t think so, no.”

Francis has experienced several bouts of ill health over the last two years and is prone to lung infections because he had pleurisy as a young adult and had part of one lung removed. REUTERS

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