Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

The royal family

Princess of Wales: surgery and recuperation

1000 replies

yetanotherusernameAgain · 17/01/2024 14:23

No thread yet?

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-68009259

OP posts:
Thread gallery
8
MaudeKidd · 17/01/2024 23:57
Feel Better Get Well Soon GIF by GreetPool

I said straight away, oh she's had a hysterectomy. I had a full hysterectomy 16 yrs ago due to endometriosis and having severe hyperemersis when pregnant. She has suffered when pregnant. If this is the case, I wish her well with her recovery.

alltootired · 17/01/2024 23:59

@stomachameleon I specifically said I am not critical of William doing this. I was challenging the idea that everyone would do this. That is not true. The only people I know who took so much time off knew their spouse was dying.

HeddaGarbled · 18/01/2024 00:03

It’s made the New York Times, so it’s not just us that’s interested.

Lndnmummy · 18/01/2024 00:05

WhyAmINotCleaning · 17/01/2024 18:57

Isn't all surgery 'planned' to an extent. I hope she is OK. She's been through a lot with Meghan and Harry, her family business etc.

I called it! Knew it

Astridspuzzle · 18/01/2024 00:15

MaudeKidd · 17/01/2024 23:57

I said straight away, oh she's had a hysterectomy. I had a full hysterectomy 16 yrs ago due to endometriosis and having severe hyperemersis when pregnant. She has suffered when pregnant. If this is the case, I wish her well with her recovery.

@maudkidd why did Hyperemesis mean that you needed a hysterectomy years later? I can understand how endo might require one but what damage does Hyperemesis do?

Pallisers · 18/01/2024 00:19

HeddaGarbled · 18/01/2024 00:03

It’s made the New York Times, so it’s not just us that’s interested.

no one in the US is interested in the POW's health. It was reported because the Palace sent out a press release. Half if not more of the people reading this in the WP or NYT will think who exactly is she again? Some will think she is married to Prince Harry (I actually heard this on NPR - it was corrected). It is a fluff piece for US newspapers.

MaudeKidd · 18/01/2024 00:20

Ohh I meant I had hyperemersis like the Princess of Wales, that wasn't the reason I had the hysterectomy. But I wonder if endometriosis and hyperemersus are linked ?

HiHoOfftowork · 18/01/2024 00:26

I wouldn’t be surprised if she has been living with a long term condition that she has managed to keep private, such as inflammatory bowel disease. Something like ulcerative colitis or Chrons disease can cause damage to the bowel and many sufferers need bowel repair surgery later in life. It would explain why she is underweight. And it would explain the recovery time.

KarenNotAKaren · 18/01/2024 00:32

Pallisers · 18/01/2024 00:19

no one in the US is interested in the POW's health. It was reported because the Palace sent out a press release. Half if not more of the people reading this in the WP or NYT will think who exactly is she again? Some will think she is married to Prince Harry (I actually heard this on NPR - it was corrected). It is a fluff piece for US newspapers.

The NYT are not forced to publish every press release they receive. If they’ve included it it’s because their readers care.

You don’t speak for the whole of the US.

They definitely won’t think she is married to Harry.

Why people are so desperate for this woman to be unpopular is beyond me

KarenNotAKaren · 18/01/2024 00:35

Lndnmummy · 18/01/2024 00:05

I called it! Knew it

I’m rather surprised the warmongers of the world don’t go to Harry and Meghan for advice. Being able to hospitalise a family member from halfway across the world must require a special kind of superpower that all the Doctor Evil types will covet.

Crispynoodle · 18/01/2024 00:39

I had a distal pancreatectomy and splenectomy and was supposed to be in hospital for 14 days......

SpursFan2 · 18/01/2024 00:42

fuckmyuteruslining · 17/01/2024 14:30

Given that the palace described the Queen's terminal cancer as periodic mobility problems I don't find their use of 'routine' here very reassuring. Apparently healthy 42 year olds don't usually need 10 days in hospital for their recovery for minor issues. It maybe elective but it's not minor.

@fuckmyuteruslining where did you find out that the Queen had terminal cancer?

alltootired · 18/01/2024 00:44

It was all over the media abroad.

JewelleryCat · 18/01/2024 00:51

alltootired · 18/01/2024 00:44

It was all over the media abroad.

It was? How come we didn’t get told?

KarenNotAKaren · 18/01/2024 00:54

JewelleryCat · 18/01/2024 00:51

It was? How come we didn’t get told?

Because we know better than to publish sensationalist lies about the Queen. There is no evidence she had cancer at all. She was a 96yo woman, of coulees she had bloody health issues from time to time

viques · 18/01/2024 00:58

FrancisSeaton · 17/01/2024 15:03

I would have loved to have even been prescribed pain relief after my hysterectomy let alone be looked after for a couple of weeks. How the other half live 🤬

Especially at the clinic where she is ! My friend was there and it was amazing, the staff are fabulous and the food delicious.

HeddaGarbled · 18/01/2024 01:09

This is the report in the New York Times. Sorry for massive copy and paste. I have a subscription but linking doesn’t make it readable:

Princess of Wales to Be Hospitalized for 10 Days After Abdominal Surgery

Kensington Palace said Catherine, the wife of Prince William, would not return to public duties until after Easter. Separately, King Charles will receive prostate treatment next week.

Image

Two of the most senior members of Britain’s royal family have been hit by health concerns, with Catherine, the Princess of Wales and the wife of Prince William, undergoing abdominal surgery in London on Tuesday, while King Charles III will receive treatment for an enlarged prostate next week.
Catherine will be hospitalized for 10 to 14 days, according to the couple’s office in Kensington Palace, and will convalesce for two to three months after that. The king’s recovery is expected to be swifter, according to Buckingham Palace, which described his treatment as a “corrective procedure” for a common, benign condition.
Kensington Palace did not offer details on Catherine’s diagnosis or prognosis, other than to say that the surgery had been planned and was successful, and that her condition was “not cancerous.” It said the princess, who is 42, would recuperate at home after she left the hospital and would not return to public duties until after Easter.
“Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales was admitted to the London Clinic yesterday for planned abdominal surgery,” Kensington Palace said in a four-paragraph news release. It added: “She hopes the public will understand her desire to maintain as much normality for her children as possible; and her wish that her personal medical information remains private.”

The news of King Charles’s medical procedure came about an hour later. Buckingham Palace announced he would postpone his engagements for a “short period of recuperation.” It did not say at which hospital Charles, 75, would be treated. A palace official said the king had decided to disclose his treatment because he hoped it would encourage other men who may be experiencing symptoms similar to his to get checked.

Benign prostate enlargement is common in men over age 50, according to Britain’s National Health Service. In those over 70, it can be found in up to 90 percent of men. It is not cancerous and it does not usually pose a serious health threat. Treatment includes medication and changes to diet and lifestyle, as well as surgical procedures in some more severe cases to cut excess tissue from the prostate gland.

Taken together, the medical announcements were a jolt to the British royal family, which had been in a period of relative tranquillity, following a turbulent couple of years that included the deaths of Queen Elizabeth II, in 2022, and her husband, Prince Philip, in 2021.
Catherine’s hospital, The London Clinic, an elite private institution in the Marylebone neighborhood of London, has treated other members of the royal family, as well as celebrities like the actress Elizabeth Taylor and foreign leaders like the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. John F. Kennedy, the future president, was told by doctors he had Addison’s disease while a patient at the hospital in 1947.
In a royal family buffeted by drama and scandal, Catherine, formerly known as Kate Middleton, has often been viewed as a figure of stability. After being subjected to titillating media coverage of her romance with William, a classmate at St. Andrews University in Scotland, Catherine has carved out an identity as a parent, a patron of charities and a companion to her husband on foreign tours.
She and Prince William, along with their three children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis, have moved to the foreground of the family since the queen’s death, and the rupture between the family and Prince Harry, William’s younger brother, and his wife, Meghan.
The family played a conspicuous role in the queen’s state funeral, as well as the coronation of Charles last May, where Prince George held the king’s robe as one of the pages. His sister, Charlotte, wore an ivory silk crepe dress by the designer Alexander McQueen — a miniature version of the one worn by her mother.
Catherine has also become a familiar figure at events like the Wimbledon tennis tournament, where she is a patron of the All England Lawn Tennis Club and has presented the trophy to the winner of the ladies’ singles competition.
In public opinion polls, Catherine routinely ranks among the family’s most popular members, though she still occasionally draws negative coverage for issues like her relationship with her sister-in-law Meghan, which some British tabloid newspapers have described as frosty.
William and Catherine are known for guarding their privacy on medical issues. William suffered a bout of Covid-19 in April 2020, during one of the most intense phases of the pandemic, but the news was not disclosed for several months. Some suggested that he did not want to cause alarm, since his father, then Prince Charles, had contracted the illness around the same time.
William, 41 and the heir to the throne, will also suspend his public duties while Catherine is in the hospital and immediately after her return home, according to a palace official. He may postpone other engagements during the two to three months that his wife is expected to be convalescing.
Catherine will recuperate at Adelaide Cottage, a four-bedroom house on the grounds of Windsor Castle, to which the couple moved in 2022, after having lived in a grand apartment in Kensington Palace.

Mummyoflittledragon · 18/01/2024 01:21

VickyEadieofThigh · 17/01/2024 14:58

Total abdominal hysterectomy requires at least 10 days in hospital - my partner's was done within a month of diagnosis because they feared ovarian cancer.

It doesn’t. I had pretty much the largest surgery for hysterectomy. An 8 inch lateral scar from above my belly button to pubic bone and was in for 3 or 4 nights post surgery. Ovaries and cervix also removed. Recovery was over 5 months. I was very ill pre surgery.

Snippit · 18/01/2024 01:26

My daughter had a hysterectomy last year, laparoscopic. She was released the next day and fairly mobile. I do hope she’s ok, I think she is a national treasure.

KarenNotAKaren · 18/01/2024 01:27

The Daily Fail has over reacted as usual.

Of all the wars happening, the attack on poor people and the inhumane Rwanda bill being passed…and Their WHOLE front page boils down to “Two people attend their medical appointments”

Princess of Wales: surgery and recuperation
Blahdeblah12345 · 18/01/2024 01:36

no one in the US is interested in the POW's health. It was reported because the Palace sent out a press release. Half if not more of the people reading this in the WP or NYT will think who exactly is she again? Some will think she is married to Prince Harry (I actually heard this on NPR - it was corrected). It is a fluff piece for US newspapers.

Just watching CBS News with Nora O'Donnell, one of the most popular evening news broadcasts in the US and it was one of the top stories. So I think people must be interested. Also, everyone knows who she is don't be ridiculous

LaurieStrode · 18/01/2024 01:52

HiHoOfftowork · 18/01/2024 00:26

I wouldn’t be surprised if she has been living with a long term condition that she has managed to keep private, such as inflammatory bowel disease. Something like ulcerative colitis or Chrons disease can cause damage to the bowel and many sufferers need bowel repair surgery later in life. It would explain why she is underweight. And it would explain the recovery time.

This is my take, as well. It's a bowel disorder of some sort. My mom was in for two weeks after a colon resection.

user1492757084 · 18/01/2024 02:03

It's terrible for anyone to have surgery and be in hospital for weeks. Hopefully the Princess if Wales recovers quickly and completely.

Q2C4 · 18/01/2024 02:58

nildesparandum · 17/01/2024 22:46

Whatever is wrong with her must be awful, but I was far more upset about the first item on the 6pm news.It was about that poor little 2 year old boy who had starved to death beside the body of his dead father.

Well said; I thought the same. Absolutely tragic case, such a waste, poor little boy.

crochetmonkey74 · 18/01/2024 05:32

Why are the papers saying that William will have to 'juggle childcare and looking after Kate'
They literally live with loads of staff to do everything when they are well , let alone ill

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.

This thread is not accepting new messages.