Los Angeles Times

Prince Philip leaves hospital

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON — Britain’s Prince Philip returned to Windsor Castle on Tuesday, following a month in the hospital during which he was treated for an infection and underwent a heart procedure.

Philip, 99, the husband of Queen Elizabeth II, had been hospitaliz­ed since being admitted Feb. 16 to the private King Edward VII’s Hospital in London, where he was treated for the infection.

He was transferre­d to a specialize­d cardiac care hospital, St. Bartholome­w’s, for a short stay and a heart procedure before returning to King Edward VII’s.

Photograph­ers outside the private hospital captured his departure in the back of a black car. Buckingham Palace issued a statement confirming Philip’s release.

“His Royal Highness wishes to thank all the medical staff who looked after him at both King Edward VII’s Hospital and St. Bartholome­w’s Hospital, and everyone who has sent their good wishes,” the statement said.

Philip’s illness is not believed to be related to the coronaviru­s. Both he and the queen received COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns in January and publicized the matter to encourage others to get inoculated.

Philip, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, retired in 2017 and rarely appears in public. Before his hospitaliz­ation, he had been isolating at Windsor Castle, west of London, with the queen.

His illness comes as the royal family deals with the fallout of an interview with Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and her husband, Prince Harry. In the broadcast, Meghan, who is biracial, said the palace had failed to help her when she had suicidal thoughts and that an unidentifi­ed member of the royal family had raised “concerns” about the color of her baby’s skin when she was pregnant with her son, Archie.

The interview, conducted by Oprah Winfrey, divided people around the world. While many say the allegation­s demonstrat­e the need for change inside a palace that hasn’t kept pace with the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements, others have criticized Harry and Meghan for dropping their bombshell while Philip was hospitaliz­ed.

The longest-serving royal consort in British history, Philip married then-Princess Elizabeth in 1947.

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