The Scotsman

Good health barring Covid and sporting injuries

◆ The King has suffered polo and horse-riding damage – and narrowly missed an avalanche as well as contractin­g coronaviru­s

- Angus Howarth www.scotsman.com

It is hoped that Charles’s decision to share details of his diagnosis may help public understand­ing for all those around the world who are affected by cancer.

In a statement yesterday, Buckingham Palace said the King “is grateful to his medical team for their swift interventi­on, which was made possible thanks to his recent hospital procedure”.

He has begun a schedule of regular treatments, during which he has been advised by doctors to postpone publicfaci­ng duties, the Palace said.

Previous health issues have included contractin­g coronaviru­s at the beginning of the pandemic and being knocked unconsciou­s after being thrown from his horse while playing polo, and he narrowly escaped an avalanche which killed a close friend.

Concern has been expressed over the years at his “sausage fingers” amid fears they might be due to fluid build-up or other conditions.

But Charles had been aware of his puffy fingers for decades.

“He really does look surprising­ly appetising and has sausage fingers just like mine,” he wrote to a friend after the birth of his first son, William, in 1982.

In March 2020, Charles, then 71, caught Covid-19 before vaccinatio­ns were available, but only had mild symptoms.

He isolated at Birkhall, Aberdeensh­ire, away from the thenduches­s of Cornwall, who tested negative, and carried on working at his desk.

He lost his sense of taste and smell for a time, and later spoke of the “strange, frustratin­g and often distressin­g” experience of being without friends and relatives during lockdown.

He caught Covid for a second time in February 2022, but was triple-vaccinated.

Charles has kept active with hill-walking and gardening, but did suffer from back pain, attributed to numerous falls from horses over the years while playing polo.

A devotee of organic food, he launched his own food brand, Duchy Originals, in 1990, which is now run as Waitrose Duchy Organic.

In March 2019, as Charles and Camilla began an official tour to the Caribbean, they were photograph­ed by the paparazzi relaxing on a beach in Barbados in their swimming costumes.

Charles won praise for his lithe figure and his on-trend 12-year-old floral trunks.

In 2008 he had a non-cancerous growth removed from the bridge of his nose in a minor,

I don't think I have ever needed an osteopath so much as I have today (Then) Prince Charles

routine procedure and in 2003 had a hernia operation at the private King Edward VII'S Hospital in London, the hospital favoured by the royal family.

He joked “hernia today, gone tomorrow” to waiting media after being discharged the next day.

Charles never travelled on royal tours without a special cushion, usually a tartan one, which he used to ease back pain.

A red velvet one is always placed on the King’s chair during state banquets at Buckingham Palace.

In 2003, during an engagement at a Sikh temple in Southall, west London, he told the congregati­on that he would need a little of their expert care as he sat on the hard floor.

"I don't think I have ever needed an osteopath so much as I have today," he joked.

Charles has been an advocate of alternativ­e and complement­ary medicines, including homeopathy.

He was patron of the regulatory body the General Osteopathi­c Council. He has urged health ministers to adopt a more holistic approach to tackling health problems.

In 1980 he was thrown and kicked by his pony during a polo match at Windsor and needed six stitches. A two-inch crescent scar on his left cheek bore witness to the incident.

On another occasion he was hit in the throat, causing him to lose his voice for ten days.

Charles resisted pressure to give up polo after he collapsed in 1980 at the end of a game in Florida and had to be put on a saline drip.

In 1988, skiing off piste at Klosters on one of Europe's most dangerous runs, he narrowly escaped the avalanche which killed his good friend Major Hugh Lindsay.

Charles managed to jump out of the way to reach a ledge and helped save the life of another friend, Patti Palmertomk­inson.

He later recalled the horror of the avalanche, saying he had never seen anything so terrifying.

In 1990 he broke his right arm in a fall during a polo match. A second operation was necessary three months after the tumble.

In 1992 he had an operation to repair torn cartilage in his left knee – again after a polo injury.

In 1993 he was hurt again during a game at Windsor, aggravatin­g an old back injury.

He also broke a rib when he tumbled from his horse in a hunting accident in 1998.

Despite the discomfort, the prince insisted on trekking in the Himalayas a few weeks afterwards during an official visit to Nepal and Bhutan.

Three months later in October 1998, he was back in hos

pital undergoing laser keyhole surgery on his right knee cartilage due to wear and tear from years of sport and exercise.

In June 2001, he fractured a small bone in his shoulder after falling off his horse.

A few months later in August 2001, he was knocked unconsciou­s and taken to hospital when his horse threw him during a polo match.

Charleshas­alsostrain­edtendons in his wrist while salmon fishing in Scotland and injured himself gardening.

The King has said that, as a child, he was rushed to Great Ormond Street Hospital to stop his appendix “exploding”.

The appendix procedure took place in February 1962.

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 ?? ?? The Prince of Wales, left, suffered multiple polo injuries. Below, leaving hospital in 2003 after his hernia operation. Right, there have also been a few horse riding scrapes
The Prince of Wales, left, suffered multiple polo injuries. Below, leaving hospital in 2003 after his hernia operation. Right, there have also been a few horse riding scrapes
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