Clinton home after clot treatment
US secretary of state Hillary Clinton has left a New York hospital, three days after doctors discovered a blood clot in her head.
Mrs Clintonâs medical team advised her last night that she was making good progress on all fronts and said they were confident she would make a full recovery, said the former first ladyâs spokesman Philippe Reines.
Doctors had been treating Mrs Clinton, 65, with blood thinners to dissolve a clot in a vein that runs through the space between the brain and the skull behind the right ear.
âSheâs eager to get back to the office,â Mr Reines said, adding that the secretary and her family were grateful for the excellent care she received at New York-Presbyterian Hospital.
He said details of when she would return to work would be clarified in the coming days.
Mrs Clinton had been in the hospital since Sunday, when doctors discovered the clot on an MRI test during a follow-up exam stemming from concussion she suffered earlier in December. She fainted while at home battling a stomach virus, fell and struck her head.
âGrateful my Mom discharged from the hospital and is heading home,â her daughter Chelsea said on Twitter. âEven more grateful her medical team (is) confident sheâll make a full recovery.â
Earlier yesterday, the State Department said Mrs Clinton had been speaking by telephone with staff in Washington and reviewing paperwork in hospital.
âSheâs been quite active on the phone with all of us,â said department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland.
Before being released from hospital, Mrs Clinton was photographed getting into a black van with her husband, former president Bill Clinton, Chelsea and a security contingent, to be taken elsewhere on the sprawling hospital campus. The last time Mrs Clinton had been seen publicly was on December 7.
Her doctors said on Monday that there was no neurological damage but that they planned to keep her in the hospital while they established the proper dose for the blood thinners. They said she had been in good spirits and was engaging with doctors, family and aides.
Sidelined by her illness for most of December, Mrs Clinton was absent on December 21 when President Barack Obama nominated Democratic senator John Kerry to succeed her when she steps down at the start of Mr Obamaâs second term, as had long been planned.
The illness also forced to cancel scheduled evidence before Congress about a scathing report into the attack on the US diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans, although she could still testify in the future.
âShe has said that she is openâ to going before Congress, Ms Nuland said yesterday. âWe are working with them now on their schedule, because thereâs also a question of when they are going to be in.â
Mrs Clinton had expected to return to work this week and had already started to resume regular phone contact with her foreign counterparts. On Saturday, the day before the clot was discovered, she had a half-hour conversation with Lakhdar Brahimi, the United Nations envoy to Syria, in which they discussed the state of affairs in that country.
That day she also spoke by telephone to Qatari prime minister and foreign minister Hamad bin Jassim Al Thani, discussing recent developments in Syria, Afghanistan and the Palestinian territories.
The illness has also raised questions about Mrs Clintonâs political future and how her health might influence her decision about whether to run for president in 2016, as prominent Democrats have been urging her to consider.
She suffered from a blood clot in 1998, midway through her husbandâs second term as president, although that clot was located in a knee.




