
The Vatican says Pope Francis remains in an “important” state, but “no more respiratory crisis,” Vatican said in a Sunday statement.
He is still receiving high oxygen therapy and has blood transfusion.
He also experienced a “light” kidney problem, but he continued to be alert and oriented.
The Pope was admitted to Gemelli Hospital in Rome on February 14 after a few days of breathing, and was treated with bronchitis before being diagnosed with pneumonia in both lungs.
The new statement says the Vatican has experienced a respiratory crisis on Saturday and is in a “important state.”
Early Sunday, the Pope issued a statement to Catholic believers and not to deliver traditional Angelus prayer for the second week of the week.
On Sunday, the Vatican statement said in the morning, the Pope said, “These days, I participated in the holy mass with the people who cared for him.”
The Pope, in particular, constricted pleurisitis as a young man, and was partially removed as a young man, especially the lung infections that could be caused by pneumonia, bacteria, viruses or fungi.
The leader of the Roman Catholic Church was admitted to the hospital several times during the 12 -year term, including bronchitis treatment in the same hospital in March 2023.
In Argentina, Pope Francis is the first Latin America, the first Jesus, and leads the Roman Catholic Church.









