Pope Francis’s condition is stable and not critical, a Vatican source confirmed on Friday, following significant clinical improvements as the 88-year-old pontiff recovers from pneumonia in both lungs.
The Argentine pope has spent the past two weeks at Rome’s Gemelli hospital, with the Vatican reporting incremental improvements in his condition in recent days.
A Vatican source said Friday that the “criticality has passed, for the moment”, while cautioning that Francis’s overall condition “remains complex” and his prognosis still “reserved”.
Earlier Friday, the Vatican said the pope had spent another peaceful night in hospital.
After being hospitalised on February 14 for breathing difficulties, the pontiff’s condition sparked widespread alarm as it deteriorated into pneumonia in both lungs.
But there has been no recurrence of the breathing attack he suffered at the weekend and since then the Vatican has released more optimistic medical updates.
On Monday, it said Francis showed a “slight improvement”, and on Tuesday noted that his condition was “critical but stable”, the last time it used the term “critical” for his condition.
A “further, slight improvement” was reported Wednesday and on Thursday the Vatican said the “clinical conditions of the Holy Father are confirmed to be improving today also”.
The Vatican has not yet modified the pope’s prognosis of “reserved”, however — which means doctors will not predict changes in his health.
Medical experts have warned that Francis’s age and the chronic respiratory disease from which he suffers mean a sustained recovery could take time.
“Given the complexity of the clinical picture, further days of clinical stability are necessary to resolve the prognosis,” the Vatican said Thursday.
Francis — who has been pope since 2013 — has continued to work in hospital, where he is in a special papal suite on the 10th floor.
He also has been doing breathing exercises in between resting and praying, according to the Vatican.
This hospital stay is the fourth of his nearly 12-year papacy, and his longest.