Buckingham Palace Provides Update on King Charles After Hospital Stay
King Charles is set to resume his royal duties this week following a brief hospital admission for side effects related to his cancer treatment. Buckingham Palace confirmed the update after the 76-year-old monarch spent a restful weekend at his Highgrove residence.
The King has a busy schedule ahead, including investitures at Windsor Castle on Tuesday, along with regular state responsibilities, private meetings, and preparations for an upcoming state visit to Italy with the Queen. However, some appointments have been rescheduled to ensure he gets enough rest before traveling next week for the four-day visit.
Last week, King Charles had to cancel a planned trip to Birmingham after being admitted to the hospital on Thursday. He was monitored at the London Clinic, where he had undergone prostate surgery in January, before being discharged to Clarence House. That same evening, he was reportedly back to work, reviewing state documents from his study.
By Saturday morning, the King appeared in good spirits as he left Clarence House for Highgrove. Smiling and waving from his black Audi with the window halfway down, he acknowledged well-wishers gathered outside his London home.
Palace insiders maintain that his cancer treatment, following his diagnosis in February 2024, remains on a “positive trajectory.” A source described his hospital visit as a “minimal interruption to normal service.”
The King and Queen are still set to travel to Italy from April 7-10, marking a historic moment as Charles will become the first British sovereign to address both houses of the Italian parliament. However, their planned visit to the Vatican has been postponed due to Pope Francis’s health concerns, rather than the King’s condition.
Veteran royal expert Phil Dampier commented, “Charles will be determined to go to Italy. It would have to take a severe turn for the worse in his health for him not to go. I’m sure that the doctors will be urging him to rest and build up reserves of energy in anticipation of the trip.”