Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Pope Francis sits in the passenger seat of a silver car. Pope Francis arrives at the Vatican, on June 16, 2023, nine days after undergoing abdominal surgery. Pope Francis said Thursday June 22, 2023 he was short of breath and still feeling the effects of anesthesia from abdominal surgery two weeks ago. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, File)

ROME (AP) — Pope Francis said Thursday he was short of breath and still feeling the effects of anesthesia from abdominal surgery two weeks ago.

Francis made the comments to explain why he chose not to deliver a prepared speech to visiting charity workers for Eastern rite churches. Instead, the speech was handed out.

“I’m still under the effect of anesthesia,” Vatican News quoted Francis as saying. “My breathing isn’t good.”

The 86-year-old pontiff underwent three hours of surgery under general anesthesia June 7 to repair a hernia in his abdominal wall and remove intestinal scar tissue. He was discharged on June 16, with his surgeon saying he was “better than before.”

“I’m still under the effect of anesthesia,” Vatican News quoted Pope Francis as saying. “My breathing isn’t good.”

Francis has complained previously about feeling the effects of anesthesia long after surgical procedures, including after an operation in 2021 to remove 33 centimeters (13 inches) of his large intestine. He had cited that reaction in part in refusing surgery to repair strained ligaments in his knee.

His surgeon for both the 2021 and 2023 operations, Dr. Sergio Alfieri of Rome’s Gemelli hospital, has stressed that there were no adverse reactions to anesthesia either time, though he acknowledged that “no one likes” to be put under and operated on.

Francis had part of one lung removed as a young man following a respiratory infection and had a three-day hospital stay this past spring for bronchitis. He often speaks in a whisper and can seem out of breath, especially when physically strained.

Part of his rehabilitation after the most recent surgery involved respiratory exercises.

Alfieri has urged Francis to take it easy so that the scar can heal and he can fully regain his strength before upcoming trips in August to Portugal and Mongolia. Francis hasn’t exactly followed doctors’ orders, holding a normal slate of audiences in recent days including high-profile meetings this week with the Cuban and Brazilian presidents.

The latest from america

Picturehouse
“Pan’s Labyrinth” embodies the core tension of Catholic life: the push and pull between the eternal and the worldly.
John DoughertyFebruary 07, 2025
A woman holds cans of vegetable oil provided by U.S. Agency for International Development in Pajut, South Sudan, in this 2017 photo. Catholic Relief Services provided food assistance, with U.S.A.I.D. funding, to communities and people who returned to the area after being displaced during violence in 2013. (CNS photo/Nancy McNally, Catholic Relief Services)
In partnership with the U.S. Agency for International Development, CRS saves lives, empowers people and creates goodwill for the United States. All for less than one percent of our national budget.
Carolyn WooFebruary 07, 2025
Marianne Jean-Baptiste and Michele Austin in ‘Hard Truths’ (Bleecker Street)
Why is Pansy so angry? That is, in many ways, the raison d’etre of ‘Hard Truths.’
Maurice Timothy ReidyFebruary 07, 2025
Sunday Mass attendance in person at Catholic churches in the U.S. is back to pre-pandemic levels, although just under one quarter of the nation’s Catholics are in the pews on a regular weekly basis.
Gina Christian - OSV NewsFebruary 07, 2025