London: The King will travel with two full-time royal doctors during his 11-day trip to Australia and Samoa as he pauses his ongoing cancer treatment for the first time since his diagnosis in February.
The 75-year-old monarch’s health will be monitored closely during the visit, Buckingham Palace aides said this week, stressing the decision to pause his regular treatment and resume it when he returns to Britain followed advice from his personal physicians.
Charles’s visit to Australia will be the first by a reigning British king, when he and his wife, Queen Camilla, arrive for their landmark tour on October 18. It is the royal couple’s first trip since 2018, when they opened the Commonwealth Games on the Queensland Gold Coast.
In addition to travelling with his own doctors, The Times reported the King would be supported by medical teams in Australia and Samoa. In Australia, the itinerary has been designed with the King’s health in mind: the King and Queen will have a rest day and there will be no evening engagements.
Charles has been receiving cancer care regularly since his diagnosis, even returning to London once a week from Scotland during the summer break for treatment. The type of cancer, discovered during his treatment for an enlarged prostate at the beginning of the year, has not been revealed.
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Michael Dixon, head of the royal medical household, who is known for his interest in homeopathy, would not be one of the doctors travelling with the King, the paper reported.
Steps taken to support Charles abroad are reportedly to be the same as previous arrangements put in place for the late Queen. They included travelling with a supply of the monarch’s blood, to ensure an exact match if a transfusion was needed.
At the time the visit was announced, Buckingham Palace said it had been curtailed on medical advice, with a visit to New Zealand dropped from the itinerary and other changes to the program.