Bush spokesman says ex-president's fever rising
|
FILE
- In a Tuesday, June 12, 2012 file photo, former President George H.W.
Bush, and his wife, former first lady Barbara Bush, arrive for the
premiere of HBO's new documentary on his life near the family compound
in Kennebunkport, Maine. Bush spokesman Jim McGrath said Wednesday, Dec.
26. 2012 that doctors at the Houston hospital where Bush has been
treated for a month remain “cautiously optimistic” that he will recover.
Still, no discharge date has been set, and McGrath says that doctors
are being cautious because at Bush’s age “sometimes issues crop up that
are beyond anybody’s ability to discern or foretell.” |
HOUSTON (AP)
-- A "stubborn" fever that kept former President George H.W. Bush in a
hospital over Christmas has gotten worse, and doctors have put him on a
liquids-only diet, his spokesman said Wednesday.
Jim
McGrath, Bush's spokesman in Houston, had said earlier in the day that
the fever had gone away, but he later corrected himself.
"It's
an elevated fever, so it's actually gone up in the last day or two,"
McGrath told The Associated Press.
"It's a stubborn fever that won't go
away."
Doctors at Methodist Hospital in
Houston have run tests and are treating the fever with Tylenol, but they
still haven't nailed down a cause, McGrath said. Doctors also have put
Bush on a liquid diet, though McGrath could not say why.
The
bronchitis-like cough that initially brought Bush to the hospital on
Nov. 23 has improved, McGrath said.
The 88-year-old is now coughing
about once a day, he said.
Bush was visited on
Christmas by his wife, Barbara, his son, Neil, and Neil's wife, Maria,
and a grandson, McGrath said. Bush's daughter, Dorothy, will arrive
Wednesday in Houston from Bethesda, Md. The 41st president has also been
visited twice by his sons, George W. Bush, the 43rd president, and Jeb
Bush, former governor of Florida.
Bush and his wife live in Houston during the winter and spend their summers at a home in Kennebunkport, Maine.
The
former president was a naval aviator in World War II - at one point the
youngest in the Navy - and was shot down over the Pacific. He achieved
notoriety in retirement for skydiving on at least three of his birthdays
since leaving the White House in 1992.
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