Uncategorized

Pope Francis is in ‘critical condition’ and suffering kidney failure, Vatican announces

Pope Francis remains in critical condition and is suffering kidney failure in hospital, the Vatican has announced.

Blood tests show the pontiff is suffering early kidney failure as Francis battles pneumonia and a complex lung infection, officials said in a statement last night.

In an update this morning, the Vatican said in a brief statement that Francis, 88, had a good night and was resting after he was ‘well oriented’ on Sunday and attended Mass.

‘The night passed well, the pope slept and is resting’, it said as the Pope entered his 11th day at the Gemelli hospital in Rome, making this the longest hospitalisation of his papacy.

The pope, the leader of the worldwide Catholic Church since 2013, was admitted on Valentine’s Day with breathing difficulties.

Officials said on Sunday that the Pope hadn’t had any more respiratory crises since Saturday night but was still receiving high flows of supplemental oxygen, reiterating that Francis was still considered to be in critical condition.

Some blood tests showed ‘initial, mild, kidney failure,’ but doctors said it was under control. The decreased platelet count, necessary for clotting, that was first detected Saturday was stable.

‘The complexity of the clinical picture, and the necessary wait for drug therapies to provide some feedback, dictate that the prognosis remains reserved,’ the doctors concluded.

Pope Francis is in critical condition and suffering kidney failure, the Vatican has announced

+10
View gallery

Pope Francis is in critical condition and suffering kidney failure, the Vatican has announced

What happens with Pope leadership when he becomes incapacitated?
People pray outside the Gemelli Hospital where Pope Francis is admitted for treatment, in Rome, Italy, February 23, 2025

+10
View gallery

People pray outside the Gemelli Hospital where Pope Francis is admitted for treatment, in Rome, Italy, February 23, 2025

Faithful pray outside hospital for critically ill Pope Francis

Earlier on Sunday, the Pope from his hospital bed thanked doctors as well as people sending ‘prayers of comfort’ from all over the world.

‘I am confidently continuing my hospitalisation at the Gemelli Hospital, carrying on with the necessary treatment – and rest is also part of the therapy!’ the pontiff wrote in a statement.

He shared on Twitter/X on Sunday: ‘I have recently received many messages of affection, and I have been particularly struck by the letters and drawings from children.

‘Thank you for your closeness, and for the consoling prayers I have received from all over the world!’

The pontifex was initially diagnosed with bronchitis but this developed into pneumonia in both lungs – and on Saturday night, the Vatican warned for the first time that his condition was critical.

Francis is alert but ‘the complexity of the clinical picture, and the need to wait for the pharmacological treatments to have some effect, mean that the prognosis remains reserved’, the Vatican concluded.

Abele Donati, head of the anaesthesia and intensive care unit at the Marche University Hospital, told the Corriere della Sera daily that the renal failure ‘could signal the presence of sepsis in the early stages’.

‘It is the body’s response to an ongoing infection, in this case of the two lungs’, he said.

Pope Francis attends a diocesan assembly at the basilica of Saint John Lateran, on October 25

+10
View gallery

Pope Francis attends a diocesan assembly at the basilica of Saint John Lateran, on October 25

Vatican faithful concerned as pope’s hospital stay duration uncertain
Women pray during a mass for the health of Pope Francis at the Metropolitan Cathedral in Guatemala City on February 23,2025

+10
View gallery

Women pray during a mass for the health of Pope Francis at the Metropolitan Cathedral in Guatemala City on February 23,2025

A view of the Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic, in Rome, Monday, Feb. 24, 2025

+10
View gallery

A view of the Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic, in Rome, Monday, Feb. 24, 2025

Pope Francis asks aide to read speech due to ‘breathing difficulties’
The statue of late Pope John Paul II outside of Agostino Gemelli Hospital where Pope Francis is hospitalized in Rome, Italy, 24 February

+10
View gallery

The statue of late Pope John Paul II outside of Agostino Gemelli Hospital where Pope Francis is hospitalized in Rome, Italy, 24 February

Professor Sergio Alfieri, leading the medical team treating the pope at Rome’s Gemelli hospital, warned at a press conference on Friday that ‘the real risk in these cases is that the germs pass into the blood’, which could result in sepsis, a life-threatening condition.

Francis’s continued hospitalisation has sparked widespread concern, with Catholics around the world praying for his recovery.

It has also fuelled speculation about whether he might step down.

He has always left the door open to following his predecessor, Benedict XVI, who in 2013 became the first pope since the Middle Ages to resign.

But he has repeatedly said it was not the time.