Recently, Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom visited the Royal London Hospital remotely through a video connection. When communicating with a recovered new crown patient at the hospital, the queen said that the new crown virus made herself "exhausted".

  According to the British "Guardian" report on April 10, the Queen of England visited the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel district of London remotely on the 6th to commemorate the official opening of the hospital's Queen Elizabeth Campus.

  It is reported that the Queen Elizabeth campus of the Royal London Hospital is currently one of the largest intensive care units in the UK. In response to the surge in the number of infections in the UK after the outbreak of the new crown epidemic, the hospital has built a new ward with a total of 155 beds in five weeks. .

  In this video link, the Queen and some medical staff who have worked or treated at Queen Elizabeth Hospital talked to patients and heard their experiences during the epidemic.

  Talking to Asef Hussain, a recovered patient, the Queen said the virus had left her "exhausted".

  Hussein is the third member of his family to be hospitalized with Covid-19, who contracted it in December 2020, and his brother and father have died of the infection.

Hussein had been on a ventilator for seven weeks at the Royal London Hospital and has also been using a wheelchair and a portable oxygen machine since he was discharged.

  "It sometimes feels like we're running an endless marathon," Mireia Lopez Rey Ferrer, a nurse who has worked at the hospital since 2008, told the Queen about her experience caring for patients.

  On February 20, 2022, the 95-year-old Queen Elizabeth II tested positive for Covid-19, and the Queen cancelled a planned video meeting due to mild symptoms of Covid-19.

On March 1, local time, Buckingham Palace announced that the Queen of England has returned to work.

  It is reported that the Queen of England is in good physical condition recently, but has limited mobility.

Buckingham Palace announced on April 8 that Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, will represent the Queen at the annual Maundy chapel ceremony.

Prince Charles also took the Queen's place at the Commonwealth Day service at Westminster Abbey last month.

The Queen marked the first anniversary of her husband Prince Philip's death in private at her Windsor Castle home on April 2.