King Charles Gives First Health Update in Months in Candid Conversation with Cancer Survivor

King Charles Gives First Health Update in Months in Candid Conversation with Cancer SurvivorNew Foto - King Charles Gives First Health Update in Months in Candid Conversation with Cancer Survivor

Tayfun Salci/Anadolu via Getty King Charlesis offered a rare comment about his health as histreatment for cancercontinues. On July 22, the King, 76, spoke about how he was feeling in conversation with a cancer survivor during a walkabout in Newmarket withQueen Camilla, which wrapped up their visit there. "I asked him how he was, and he said he was feeling a lot better now and that it was 'just one of those things,' " local Lee Harman told PA, according toHello!magazine. Harman told the sovereign about his own health journey and said the King inquired about how he was. "He asked me how I was, and I said, 'I'm all good, I got the all clear from cancer last year,' " said Harman, 54, who is from the nearby town of Bury St Edmunds. The candid comment in conversation with a cancer survivor marked a rare revelation from the monarch about his own health. King Charles has maintained a full schedule of royal duties as his treatment for an undisclosed form of cancer announced in 2024 continues into this year, but he doesn't often talk about how he is feeling personally. DARREN STAPLES/POOL/AFP via Getty In February 2024, Buckingham Palace announced that the King wasdiagnosed with cancerand began treatment. The sovereign had a procedure to treat abenign enlarged prostatethat January, but a spokesmanclarifiedhe does not have prostate cancer. On doctors' advice, King Charles postponed public-facing work for a three-month period, but he continued to undertake state business and paperwork behind the scenes. He resumed forward work in late April 2024, and palace sources said before Christmas that his treatment for cancer would continue into the new year. "His treatment has been moving in a positive direction and as a managed condition the treatment cycle will continue into next year," palace sources said on Dec. 20, just a few days before he continued tradition by stepping out for church on Christmas with his family. On March 27, the palace announced that King Charlesbriefly hospitalized following an adverse reaction to his routine cancer treatment. The sovereign was admitted to the London Clinic (where he had had the prostate operation last year) after experiencing "temporary side effects that required a short period of observation in hospital," his office said. Sources said that such setbacks are not uncommon. A royal source described the scare as "the most minor bump in the road that's very much heading in the right direction," and hereturned to work the following week. Darren Staples - WPA Pool/Gett In late May, the King and Queen, 78,traveled to Canada for an official two-day trip, and an aide shared how he was managing his illness as he continued with his royal duties. "The thing you learn about this illness is that you just manage it, and that's what he does," the aide said then. "Medical science has made incredible advances, and I genuinely see no difference in him," they added. "As long as you just do what the doctors say, just live your life as normal as possible. That's exactly what he is doing." Earlier that month, the King sharedwhat "can help" during cancer treatmentin conversation with a young man who was also undergoing treatment for cancer. Tayfun Salci/Anadolu via Getty Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage?Sign up for our free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more! "He was asking me about the treatment I have starting in June and spoke to me about food and diet. He also asked me if I had undergone radiation treatment, which I had earlier this year," Exeter University student Stamford Collis, 22, said after he met the monarch at a Buckingham Palace garden party,The Telegraphreported. The King was heard saying, "It's sometimes about the diet and what you eat. It can help." Queen Camilla's son, food writerTom Parker Bowles, has said that the King and Queen eat"simple, healthy and resolutely seasonal food"with a pantry full of the "seasonal bounty of the royal estates." Read the original article onPeople

 

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