US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been sent to the hospital with a
blood clot stemming from a concussion she suffered earlier this month
and is being assessed by doctors, a State Department spokesman said.
“In
the course of a follow-up exam today, Secretary Clinton’s doctors
discovered a blood clot had formed, stemming from the concussion she
sustained several weeks ago,” spokesman Philippe Reines said in a
statement on Monday.
“She
is being treated with anti-coagulants and is at New York-Presbyterian
Hospital so that they can monitor the medication over the next 48
hours,” Reines said. “Her doctors will continue to assess her condition,
including other issues associated with her concussion. They will
determine if any further action is required.”
Clinton,
65, has been off work since her return from her last foreign trip on
December 7, although her staff has said she has been working from home.
Her
lengthy absence from public life had sparked claims from some of her
fiercer critics that she is trying to avoid testifying in a
congressional investigation into a deadly attack on a US mission in
Libya.
Earlier
this month, the State Department said Clinton had contracted a bad
stomach virus during her five-day stay in Europe. She had to cancel a
planned trip to North Africa and Abu Dhabi due to the illness.
A
week later, Clinton’s doctors said she had become severely dehydrated
due to the effects of the stomach bug and had fainted, suffering a
concussion.
They
recommended she rest at home and avoid – through mid-January – the
high-intensity travel she had been accustomed to taking as secretary of
state.
Clinton
has flown almost a million miles since taking office four years ago,
visited 112 countries and spent some 400 days in a plane.
Her
health kept her from testifying on December 20 to US lawmakers about
the attack on the US diplomatic post in the eastern Libyan city of
Benghazi on September 11.
The
assault, in which the US ambassador and three other American officials
were killed, sparked a political firestorm in the United States, and
Republicans criticized Clinton’s absence from the hearings, calling on
her to testify in January.
Clinton,
who is due to step down from her post in early 2013, also stayed away
from the White House last week when President Barack Obama nominated her
replacement, veteran Senator John Kerry.
She issued a statement paying tribute to her successor.
No comments:
Post a Comment