In keeping with her stiff upper lip approach to life, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, who was being treated for symptoms of gastroenteritis, on Monday insisted the rest of the royal family must carry on with their official duties while she remained in hospital.
The 86-year-old British monarch did not want to ‘inconvenience’ staff at the King Edward VII Hospital in London by having to make arrangements for royal visitors, insisting her hospital stay should be ‘as low key as possible’, according to royal sources. This was the first time in 10 years that she had been hospitalised and Buckingham Palace said she was going to be back home soon.
A palace spokesperson stressed that the Queen had been admitted as a precaution and was otherwise in ‘good health and good spirits’. All official engagements for this week, including the Queen's trip to Rome, were supposed to be either cancelled or postponed.
News of her illness first emerged on Friday night when she cancelled a trip to Swansea on Saturday to mark St David's Day in a military ceremony. She was taken to the hospital on Sunday from Windsor Castle, using a private car rather than an ambulance, and walked to and from the car without help.
The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, who spent the weekend in Wales, and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry, who were in Switzerland at the weekend for a friend's wedding, are being kept updated on her health.
The Queen, who turns 87 next month, was last admitted to hospital a decade ago for a scheduled operation on her knee. Her treatment included rehydration and other tests.
The 86-year-old British monarch did not want to ‘inconvenience’ staff at the King Edward VII Hospital in London by having to make arrangements for royal visitors, insisting her hospital stay should be ‘as low key as possible’, according to royal sources. This was the first time in 10 years that she had been hospitalised and Buckingham Palace said she was going to be back home soon.
A palace spokesperson stressed that the Queen had been admitted as a precaution and was otherwise in ‘good health and good spirits’. All official engagements for this week, including the Queen's trip to Rome, were supposed to be either cancelled or postponed.
News of her illness first emerged on Friday night when she cancelled a trip to Swansea on Saturday to mark St David's Day in a military ceremony. She was taken to the hospital on Sunday from Windsor Castle, using a private car rather than an ambulance, and walked to and from the car without help.
The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall, who spent the weekend in Wales, and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry, who were in Switzerland at the weekend for a friend's wedding, are being kept updated on her health.
The Queen, who turns 87 next month, was last admitted to hospital a decade ago for a scheduled operation on her knee. Her treatment included rehydration and other tests.