ROME – Pope Francis is still recovering from double pneumonia, while the Vatican’s Holy Year events are ongoing, focusing on the Catholic Church’s volunteers this weekend.
“The night passed quietly, the pope is resting,” said the Vatican’s early morning update.
The 88-year-old pontiff, who has a chronic lung ailment and underwent lung surgery in his youth, has spent almost four weeks at Rome’s Gemelli hospital. His condition has improved after experiencing some acute respiratory episodes.
While Pope Francis is receiving treatment, the Vatican is carrying on with the Jubilee celebrations, a significant event that occurs once every 25 years and attracts pilgrims globally to Rome. This weekend, the focus is on honoring volunteers, with many of them choosing to include the pope in their prayers by gathering outside the Gemelli hospital.
On Sunday, one of the cardinals most closely associated with Francis’ papacy, Canadian Cardinal Michael Czerny, presides over the Holy Year Mass for volunteers that Francis was supposed to have celebrated.
On Friday, Francis spent 20 minutes in the Gemelli hospital chapel, praying and doing some work in between rest and respiratory and physical therapy, the Vatican said. A medical update was expected later Saturday.
Francis has been using high flows of supplemental oxygen to help him breathe during the day and a noninvasive mechanical ventilation mask at night.
Doctors not involved in his care said after three weeks of acute care in the hospital for double pneumonia, they would have hoped to have seen improvement. While he has stabilized, they warned that he was increasingly at risk of secondary infections the longer he remains hospitalized. Additionally, Francis had episodes of acute respiratory failure earlier this week and underwent bronchoscopies to suction mucus from his lungs.
“He’s had respiratory failure and they were not able to liberate him from the hospital in the first three weeks. And therefore I think you’d say this does look concerning, perhaps more concerning than it did right at the beginning,” said Dr. Andrew Chadwick, a respiratory and intensive care specialist at Oxford University Hospitals in England.
Dr. Jeffrey Millstein, a clinical assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, said it wasn’t shocking that Francis hadn’t improved in three weeks, and that it was encouraging he was able to breathe part of the day with just a nasal tube of high-flow oxygen.
But he said that the pope’s condition certainly was “a precarious, touch and go kind of situation” and that recovery, while still possible, would be a long process.
Going forward, “I just would be looking for no new setbacks,” he said. “I think as long as he is dealing with the current issues and he’s just making incremental progress, that would be great.”
Francis was hospitalized Feb. 14 for what was then just a bad case of bronchitis. The infection progressed into a complex respiratory tract infection and double pneumonia that has sidelined Francis for the longest period of his 12-year papacy and raised questions about the future.
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