Vatican says chest X-ray confirms improvements in the pope’s condition
Doctors have said Francis is making slow, gradual improvements and this week declared that he is no longer in imminent danger of death.

A chest X-ray has confirmed improvements in Pope Francis’s condition in his fourth week in hospital for treatment of double pneumonia, the Vatican said on Wednesday.
Doctors have said Francis is making slow, gradual improvements and this week declared that he is no longer in imminent danger of death.

The Vatican said 88-year-old Francis again followed the Vatican’s spiritual retreat remotely and resumed physical and respiratory therapy after a quiet night.
On Thursday, Francis marks an important milestone: the 12th anniversary of his election as pope.
The Holy See has not said how the anniversary, which is a public holiday in the Vatican, might be commemorated this year.
The pope’s weekly Wednesday general audience was cancelled since the Vatican hierarchy is on retreat this week as part of the Lenten spiritual exercises that have been a mainstay of the Jesuit pope’s pontificate.

Thursday marks the 12th anniversary of Francis’s election as the 266th pope. The former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected on the fifth ballot of the 2013 conclave that was called after Pope Benedict XVI resigned.
While Francis has praised Benedict’s humility in stepping down and said he might follow in his footsteps, more recently, he has said the papacy is a job for life.
Another milestone comes on Friday, when Francis marks four weeks or 28 days of hospitalisation.

Francis is on track to equal the second-longest stay, 28 days, which John Paul recorded in 1994 when he had surgery to repair his hip joint after he fractured his right femur in a fall, according to Gemelli hospital.
The Vatican has released no photos or video of Francis since he was admitted.
The pope recorded an audio message last week to thank people for their prayers, though the weakness and breathlessness of his voice made clear how frail he was.