Edmonton Journal

Sickness, work could keep royal parents-to-be apart

- GORDON RAYNER

LONDON – The Duchess of Cambridge is expected to take time off from her royal duties until Christmas after being discharged from hospital Thursday.

Catherine, wife of Prince William, who spent three nights in the King Edward VII Hospital in London being treated for a severe form of morning sickness, has cancelled two engagement­s this weekend and is unlikely to be well enough to attend a third next week.

She has been told to rest at Kensington Palace for at least a week, meaning she is unlikely to be seen in public again until the royal family’s Christmas Day church attendance at Sandringha­m.

The duchess, 30, smiled broadly as she left hospital at 10.45 a.m. holding a bouquet of yellow roses given to her by hospital staff, saying she was feeling “much better, thank you” as she got into a waiting Jaguar with the prince.

A St. James’s Palace spokesman said: “The Duchess of Cambridge will head to Kensington Palace for a period of rest. Their Royal Highnesses would like to thank the staff at the hospital for the care and treatment the duchess received.”

Maternity experts suggest she will need to take at least two weeks off work. Her condition also means she and the prince will be separated for days at a time over the coming weeks, with William due back on shift with his search and rescue squadron in Anglesey, Wales.

The prince cannot afford to take any more time off because he would be in danger of dropping below his minimum required flying hours for the year, having already taken time off for the Olympics and the couple’s tour of the Far East.

The duchess will remain in London, within easy reach of her doctors, until she is fully recovered, and may also spend time with her parents in Berkshire, but is unlikely to risk returning to the couple’s isolated home in Anglesey until she is completely over her sickness, which could take weeks or even months.

Catherine’s condition, hyperemesi­s gravidarum, usually clears up after the first trimester, but can carry on until full term and sometimes needs further spells in hospital. She has not yet reached the 12-week stage of her pregnancy, though St. James’s Palace has not disclosed how far through her pregnancy she is.

Caitlin Dean, a trustee of the charity Pregnancy Sickness Support who suffered from the same condition, said: “She will need people to look after her. Hyperemesi­s can be quite cyclical. She will be feeling quite good now because she’s hydrated, but she needs to keep taking fluids or that cycle can start again.”

Bookies have taken tens of thousands of bets on the royal baby’s sex, name, weight, hair colour and the possibilit­y of twins or triplets. Victoria is now the clear favourite, at 9-1, followed by Diana and George at 12-1 and John and Elizabeth at 16-1.

 ?? LEON NEAL/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A bookmaker poses with a list of possible baby names for the first child of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.
LEON NEAL/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES A bookmaker poses with a list of possible baby names for the first child of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.

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