El Papa Francisco se encuentra en estado crítico en el Hospital Gemelli de Roma, generando preocupación mundial. A pesar de las complicaciones respiratorias y renales, el pontífice de 88 años se mantiene lúcido y de buen ánimo. La situación recuerda a la hospitalización de Juan Pablo II en 2005, con periodistas de todo el mundo congregándose para seguir las actualizaciones. Aunque su salud es delicada, hay un optimismo cauteloso sobre su recuperación. El Papa ha sido una figura pionera en la Iglesia Católica, abriendo puertas y descentralizando el Vaticano, lo que ha generado tanto admiradores como detractores.
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NewsTranscript
00:00Cristian Martin is in Rome right now.
00:03Of course, the Pope's health is a global issue,
00:06especially after a weekend where the news wasn't good.
00:10Cristian, we'll be back with you.
00:12Yes, Antonio.
00:13Well, we'll repeat the part I said this morning,
00:16that he had slept well, that he was resting.
00:19We add our exclusive information that he is in a good mood,
00:22he is active, he is lucid.
00:24That's important.
00:26That he had breakfast, calm, well.
00:28That he has lost some mobility
00:30due to having oxygen connected to his nose.
00:33That there is still no need for a respirator,
00:36to be intubated.
00:38We were joking, we told the colleagues,
00:40the sources, to tell them the result of San Lorenzo.
00:43They told me, we don't want to add bad news.
00:46But well, within the anguish that is here,
00:49with the colleagues of El Mundo,
00:51with the view of the world in this place,
00:53in the Gemelli Hospital,
00:55journalists are still arriving.
00:57It's going to explode.
00:58Many people said,
00:59it reminds us of the 2005 situation,
01:01when Juan Pablo II
01:03entered this hospital.
01:05I was hospitalized so many times.
01:07And well, what happened happened.
01:09At that moment, the protocol was followed,
01:11where something happens here, but it is not announced.
01:14It is announced in the Vatican, in the territory of the Vatican.
01:17And they follow us every time they recognize us as Argentines.
01:20We are the only Argentine media working here 24 hours.
01:23And they have interviewed us on many channels.
01:25And they are surprised,
01:27when we tell them,
01:29in the Argentine sector,
01:31the politicized image.
01:33They talk to us about the affection,
01:35the respect they have for everyone.
01:37A Pope who has been a pioneer, Antonio,
01:39because he has opened the doors
01:41of the Catholic religion
01:43and has decentralized this of the Vatican
01:45to open it to the world.
01:47And many think that whoever comes
01:49will have to have a continuity of the Pope.
01:52Because that's how he deserves it.
01:54Even more so if he has created enemies
01:56and has created detractors
01:58in the heart of the Vatican.
02:00The Pope is in a good mood, he is active,
02:02he is with some telecommunication.
02:04It is speculated that relatives
02:06from Argentina will come here.
02:08We could not confirm that.
02:10We have sources in the hospital,
02:12sources in the Holy See,
02:14who are informing us that he is in a good mood,
02:16he is lucid, he is at his best.
02:18And that, to the shock of the weekend,
02:20another quota of optimism is added
02:22in the face of a recovery
02:24that will take at least another week.
02:26Do you have in hand,
02:28I don't know if you have it in your hand,
02:30the last medical part?
02:32I have it, if you want, Antonio.
02:34If not, Darío, we can give it to Darío here,
02:36if you don't have it.
02:38Look, the last long, let's say,
02:40which is the one from yesterday.
02:42No, that's why.
02:44The one from this morning?
02:46The one from this morning is
02:48what Christian told you.
02:50He told you about new respiratory crises.
02:52It's all Sunday night.
02:54Two units of concentrated red blood cells were administered,
02:56which brought benefits and an increase
02:58in hemoglobin levels.
03:00Thrombocytopenia remains stable.
03:02However, some blood tests
03:04show a slight kidney failure,
03:06which is currently under control.
03:08And it also says,
03:10high-flow oxygen therapy continues.
03:14The state is critical.
03:16The prognosis is still being reserved.
03:18Problems in the lungs,
03:20problems in the kidneys,
03:22transfusions of blood,
03:24historical problems of colon, asthma.
03:26Really, 88 years,
03:28the Pope is very complicated.
03:30We are not going to say that he is fighting for his life,
03:32because he is lucid, he is better,
03:34he is active,
03:36but the situation is still
03:38really very, very complicated.