Queen advised to rest for two more weeks
- Published
The Queen has been advised by doctors to rest for two further weeks and will not undertake official visits during this time, Buckingham Palace has said.
The palace said the monarch, 95, could undertake some light duties during that time, including virtual audiences.
It said it is her "firm intention" to attend the Remembrance Sunday service at the Cenotaph on 14 November.
The Queen underwent preliminary medical checks in hospital on 20 October after cancelling a visit to Northern Ireland.
She resumed public engagements on Tuesday this week by meeting ambassadors via video link from Windsor Castle.
But it was announced that she will not attend the COP26 climate change summit in Glasgow. The palace said she would deliver her address to delegates using a recorded video message instead.
She recorded the speech on Friday afternoon.
In a statement, Buckingham Palace said: "The doctors have advised that Her Majesty can continue to undertake light, desk-based duties during this time, including some virtual audiences, but not to undertake any official visits.
"Her Majesty regrets that this means she will be unable to attend the Festival of Remembrance on Saturday, November 13."
The commemorative event takes place in the presence of members of the royal family at the Royal Albert Hall every year.
The Queen hosted a Global Investment Summit at Windsor Castle on 19 October.
The next day a spokesman said a planned trip to Northern Ireland had been cancelled, and the monarch had "reluctantly accepted medical advice to rest for the next few days".
Then, in a later statement, Buckingham Palace said she had stayed in hospital on Wednesday night after attending for "some preliminary investigations" and had returned the following day to Windsor Castle, where she was "in good spirits".
Her stay at King Edward VII's Hospital was her first overnight hospital stay in eight years
The sovereign had maintained a typically busy schedule in October but was recently seen using a walking stick at a Westminster Abbey service, the first time she has done so at a major event.
A "sensible precaution" is the message from the palace, but officials know that concerns will deepen as a result of the third in a series of cancellations - the withdrawal from a service of commemoration in Northern Ireland last week, the withdrawal from COP26 this week, and now this.
And yet, and yet, the Queen has carried out three "virtual" engagements in the last three days and she certainly seemed to enjoy them, at times smiling broadly.
She is far from incapacitated. Indeed she is not what many would think of as unwell. Fatigue, not illness, seems to be the issue.
What's really notable about this announcement is the absolute determination to attend the Remembrance Sunday service in Whitehall.
It is the most important day in her calendar. It is also, for a 95-year-old, a fair amount of standing on what can be a bitterly cold day.
She will want her strength. So she is taking it a little bit easy in the run up.
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