Pope has scan due to flu, lung complications ruled out
Pope Francis went to a hospital in Rome on November 25 for a scan, which the Vatican said had ruled out lung complications after the flu forced him to cancel his activities.
A Vatican statement said the 86-year-old pontiff had already returned to his residence in the Vatican after undergoing the CT scan at the Gemelli Isola hospital in central Rome early on November 25 afternoon, Reuters reports.
Part of one of the pope's lungs was removed when he was a young man in his native Argentina.
His next public appearance is scheduled for November 26, when he is expected to address crowds in his weekly Angelus message in St. Peter's Square.
The pope is scheduled to attend the COP28 climate conference in Dubai from Dec. 1-3, where he is expected to have nearly an entire day of bilateral meetings with world leaders attending the event.
Earlier this month, Francis skipped reading a prepared speech for a meeting with European rabbis because he had a cold, but he appeared to be in good health during a meeting with children just hours later.
In June, he had surgery on an abdominal hernia, spending nine days in hospital. He appears to have recovered fully from that operation.
On Saturdays, he usually holds regular meetings with Vatican officials, including a weekly one with the head of the Vatican department that oversees the appointment of bishops, as well as private audiences.
His agenda this on November 25 included a meeting scheduled with the president of Guinea Bissau.