Pope Francis had a good night's rest after overcoming possible risks from respiratory crisis
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Pope Francis had a restful night’s sleep on Monday, indicating progress in his recovery from pneumonia. He is currently in a stable condition, no longer requiring mechanical ventilation, and is showing no signs of new infection after a recent respiratory crisis.

“The pope rested well all night,” the Vatican said in its update from Gemelli hospital, where Francis has been hospitalized since Feb. 14.

Medical professionals confirmed that the 88-year-old pontiff went through Sunday without needing the noninvasive mechanical ventilation mask that delivers oxygen to his lungs, which he had to use after experiencing a coughing episode on Friday.

Francis did continue to receive high flow supplemental oxygen through a nasal tube.

Friday’s respiratory crisis sparked fears of a new lung infection because Francis inhaled some vomit.

Doctors aspirated it and said they needed 24 to 48 hours to determine if any new infection took hold.

On Sunday evening, they said Francis remained stable, with no fever or signs of an infection, indicating he had overcome the crisis.

His prognosis remained guarded, however, meaning he wasn’t out of danger.

On Sunday, Francis was visited by Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican secretary of state, and Archbishop Edgar Pena Parra, his chief of staff.

The content of their talks wasn’t known, but even when at the Vatican, Francis meets at least weekly with them.

He again skipped his weekly noon blessing to avoid even a brief public appearance from the hospital.

Instead, the Vatican distributed a message written by the pope from the 10th floor in which he thanked his doctors for their care and well-wishers for their prayers, and prayed again for peace in Ukraine and elsewhere.

“From here, war appears even more absurd,” Francis said in the message, which he drafted in recent days.

Francis said he was living his hospitalization as an experience of profound solidarity with people who are sick and suffering everywhere.

“I feel in my heart the ‘blessing’ that is hidden within frailty, because it is precisely in these moments that we learn even more to trust in the Lord,” Francis said in the text.

“At the same time, I thank God for giving me the opportunity to share in body and spirit the condition of so many sick and suffering people.”

The Argentine pope, who had part of one lung removed as a young man, was admitted to Gemelli on Feb. 14 after his bronchitis worsened and turned into a complex pneumonia in both lungs.

On Sunday night at the Vatican, Cardinal Konrad Krajewski presided over the evening Rosary prayer in St. Peter’s Square.

“Let us pray together with the entire church for the health of the Holy Father Francis,” said Krajewski, who is the pope’s personal Almoner, a centuries-old job of handing out alms.

Francis has elevated the job to make it an extension of his own personal charity.

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