Pope Francis, hospitalized in Rome for bronchitis, is feeling better and could leave the hospital on Saturday, which would allow him to participate in the Easter celebrations, the dean of cardinals announced this Friday.
The Argentine pontiff, 86, He spent a second “quiet” night at the Gemelli hospital, where he was admitted on Wednesday and is receiving antibiotic treatment for infectious bronchitis, Vatican sources indicated.
On Thursday night, the medical team was reassuring about the pontiff’s health.
He antibiotic treatment “produced the expected effects” and the pope could be discharged “in the next few days”, the medical report stated.
On Thursday, the Vatican assured that Jorge Bergoglio was improving and had “returned to work.”
However, their participation in the Holy Week celebrations is uncertain, starting with the Palm Sunday mass scheduled this weekend that marks the beginning of the Easter celebrations.
According to Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals, in statements to an Italian press agency, the pope will be discharged on Saturday, so he could preside over the Holy Week rites.
“Based on the information I have, the pope will leave the Gemelli tomorrow (Saturday) and preside over all the rites of Holy Week,” he said.
For now the news has not been confirmed or denied by official sources.
The Argentine, who suffers from chronic health problems and uses a wheelchair due to knee pain, is hospitalized in the private apartment reserved for the popes on the tenth floor of the Gemelli University Hospitalwhere John Paul II was hospitalized on several occasions during his papacy.
Francisco underwent Wednesday “medical checks” after suffering “respiratory difficulties” in the previous days. These tests “revealed a respiratory infection” that forced his admission, a spokesman for the Holy See had indicated.
On Twitter, the pontiff said Thursday thisr “moved by the numerous messages received” and expressed “his gratitude for the closeness and prayer.”
Among the messages of the last few hours is that of US President Joe Biden, who is Catholic, and that of his wife Jill.
“Jill and I keep Pope Francis in our prayers, and send him our best wishes for a speedy and full recovery,” Biden wrote on Twitter. “The world needs Pope Francis,” she added.
Related note: The pope will remain hospitalized, but he spent a quiet night
“Fear is always there” –
“I hope he recovers very quickly and that he can celebrate Easter here, from Saint Peter’s,” Tina Montalbano, a 60-year-old Italian tour guide, told AFP as she walked through the vast Vatican square.
“The fear is always there, but it seems that everything is going well for the moment,” he added.
The hospitalization surprised public opinion because on Wednesday Jorge Bergoglio participated with total normality in the traditional general audience in Saint Peter’s Square, during which he appeared smiling, greeting the faithful from his “popemobile”.
The Argentine pontiff was already admitted for a dozen days at the Gemelli hospital in July 2021 for a colon operation. Francisco acknowledged that this intervention left “sequelae” due to anesthesia, which is why he gave up knee surgery.
The pain in this joint, which has forced him to cancel several hearings in 2022 and postpone a trip to Africa, fuels speculation about an eventual resignation.
The leader of the Catholic Church has always left open the possibility of emulating his predecessor, Benedict XVI, who resigned in 2013.
But their messages on this option are ambivalent.
In July 2022, he said he could “step aside”, but in February he stated that the resignation of a pope “should not become a fad” and that such an idea was “not on his agenda at the moment”.
The pontiff is constantly cared for by a team of doctors and nurses, either in the Vatican or during his trips abroad.
A more than necessary measure due to his age and his medical history, since at the age of 21 he was on the verge of dying from pleurisy and suffered a partial ablation of one of his lungs.
Linked topic: The pope, hospitalized, cancels Thursday’s audiences