NEW YORK (AP) – Former President Clinton on Monday left the hospital where he had been recovering from surgery to remove scar tissue and fluid around his left lung and said he was “glad to be home.”
“I’m glad to be home and look forward to getting back to work within the next month or so,” Clinton said in a statement issued by his spokesman, Jim Kennedy.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton accompanied her husband from the Manhattan hospital to their Westchester County home, about 40 miles north. A motorcade of five or six SUVs was seen leaving New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center shortly after 5 p.m.
Clinton’s recovery was proceeding normally, and he has begun walking each day, Kennedy said. The 42nd president is expected to remain at home in Chappaqua for the next four to six weeks.
The former president said he and his wife were “very grateful to the medical team that cared for me at the hospital, and we deeply appreciate all the prayers and good wishes we’ve received in recent days.”
Nearly 10,000 people have sent get well messages to Clinton through his foundation’s Web site, clintonfoundation.org.
Clinton’s medical problem developed after his heart bypass surgery six months ago.
Doctors described last week’s operation as a low-risk procedure to relieve a problem that crops up in only a fraction of 1 percent of bypass cases. They said the combination of fluid and scar tissue had reduced Clinton’s left lung capacity by 25 percent.
Surgeons removed a rind of scar tissue nearly a third of an inch thick in some places.
The doctors had said Clinton would be hospitalized for three to 10 days; he was released after four.
The former president first noticed the problem when he suffered shortness of breath during his daily 4-mile walk near his home.
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