'Not out of danger': Pope's doctors give rare in-person update

1 month ago 13

Pope Francis is "not out of danger" and will remain in hospital for at least one more week, doctors treating him have said.

However, in their first in-person update a week after the pontiff was taken to hospital, medics have also said he was not at risk of death.

Sergio Alfieri, the chief of the pontiff's medical team, said: "Is he out of danger? No. But if the question is 'is he in danger of death', the answer is 'no'."

The 88-year-old pontiff is being treated for double pneumonia and chronic bronchitis at Rome's Gemelli hospital.

Francis was affected by seasonal flu before being taken to hospital on 14 February, Dr Alfieri said, adding that "due to his challenging duties", the pontiff had suffered fatigue.

Lisa Holland, Sky correspondent at the Gemelli Hospital in Rome

Doctors at the Gemelli Hospital in Rome spoke for the first time in public – and failed to give the reassurance over the Pope's health Catholics around the world have been hoping for.

The medical team revealed the Pope's life is still in danger. That is a very stark and worrying admission after a week of intense speculation.

They say he isn't 'at risk of death'. But that seems to mean currently his condition is stable, though he is unable to leave hospital whilst undergoing such intensive treatment.

The fact the Pope is not out of danger means he is fighting for his life, but doctors say it is possible the Pope can recover.

But separately, Vatican sources have told Sky News of their concern that the Pope may not survive this hospitalisation.

The positive signs are that the Pope is still eating, reading and getting out of bed.

One doctor said he is working and 'has the brain of a 50-year-old'.

He then said that Pope Francis was a "fragile patient" but was in "good spirits" and joking with medical staff.

As part of his treatment, the Pope is receiving occasional supplements of oxygen. The doctors added he is responding to strengthened drug therapy for pneumonia.

The doctors also warned that while he did not have sepsis - where germs enter the bloodstream - there was always a risk the infection could spread in his body. They added that was the biggest concern.

Sepsis is a complication of an infection that can lead to organ failure and death.

 AP

Image: Sergio Alfieri (R) said Pope Francis was a 'fragile patient' but was in 'good spirits'. Pic: AP

Dr Luigi Carbone, the pontiff's personal doctor, said Francis was responding to the drug therapy that was "strengthened" after the pneumonia was diagnosed earlier this week.

He is also fighting a multipronged infection of bacteria and viruses in the respiratory tract.

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Millions of people around the world have been concerned about the Pope's increasingly frail health - and his condition has given rise to speculation over a possible resignation.

In a brief update on his health earlier on Friday, the Vatican said Francis had had a good night, had got up and eaten breakfast.

On Thursday, the Vatican said the Pope's overall condition was "improving slightly" and his heart is working well.

Pope Francis has a history of respiratory illness, having lost part of one of his lungs to pleurisy as a young man. He had an acute case of pneumonia in 2023.

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