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Workers prepare St. Peter's Square at the Vatican for Holy Week celebrations March 31, 2023. Pope Francis will be present in the square for the Palm Sunday Mass, the Vatican said. CNS photo/Justin McLellan

Pope Francis set to leave hospital after three-day stay for bronchitis

By  Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service
  • March 31, 2023

ROME -- Pope Francis enjoyed a pizza "party" with staff on his second night at Rome's Gemelli hospital and was expected to be released from the hospital April 1, the Vatican press office said.

Matteo Bruni, head of the press office, later confirmed the 86-year-old pope's "presence" at the Palm Sunday Mass in St. Peter's Square April 2.

Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals, said, "With the pope at each celebration, there will be a cardinal celebrant who will be at the altar," the Italian newspaper, La Repubblica reported March 31.

According to Cardinal Re, Cardinal Leonardo Sandri will be the main celebrant at the Palm Sunday Mass and Cardinal Re will be the main celebrant at Easter morning Mass, although the pope will read his traditional message and give his blessing "urbi et orbi" (to the city and the world).

According to Vatican press office reports, Pope Francis has been showing continued and "marked" improvement for what tests revealed was a case of bronchitis, after he was admitted to the hospital the afternoon of March 29 for breathing difficulties.

In the evening of March 30, "Pope Francis had dinner, eating pizza together with those assisting him throughout the days of his hospital stay," that is, doctors, nurses, assistants and members of the Vatican police, the Vatican press office said March 31.

After breakfast on March 31, "he read some newspapers and resumed work," it said.

Pope Francis was expected to be able to return to his Vatican residence April 1, it said, although the final decision would depend on the results of tests carried out early March 31.

The pope was treated with intravenous antibiotics for the respiratory infection that was not COVID-19. The Vatican had said that the pope had complained of "some respiratory difficulties" in recent days.

The Vatican originally said the pope was taken to the hospital for "previously planned tests," and later stated that he would remain at the hospital for a few days. Pope Francis' scheduled meetings for March 30 and 31 had been canceled "to make room in his agenda for the tests to continue," an official said.

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