Future Queen of Norway's health has become 'a lot worse' amid lung disease battle, her husband reveals - as she awaits verdict in son's rape trial

The health of Norway’s future queen has taken a turn for the worse, her husband disclosed, as she continues her lengthy battle with pulmonary fibrosis.

Crown Princess Mette-Marit, aged 52, first shared her struggle with this progressive lung disease, which makes breathing increasingly difficult as the lungs scar, back in 2018.

Recently, Crown Prince Haakon announced with regret that his wife’s condition has significantly worsened. This comes just days after she was seen with a nasal cannula during the Constitution Day children’s parade on May 17.

“The Crown Princess is seriously ill, and I feel her condition has declined recently. Naturally, I am concerned about her health,” Crown Prince Haakon openly expressed on Tuesday.

He added, “The past six months have been relatively stable, but there are various phases to this illness. We are doing our best to manage it.”

When asked about the possibility of a lung transplant, Prince Haakon stated, “That decision lies with the doctors; it’s a medical matter.”

‘So they’re the ones who decide when it should happen, when it’s right. But I think she’s gotten a lot worse lately, unfortunately.’

It comes amid what has been one of the toughest times for the Norwegian throne in modern times after Mette-Marit’s son, Marius Borg Høiby, was charged with rape and sexual assault in June last year. 

Crown Princess Mette-Marit’s health has ‘gotten a lot worse’ in recent weeks amid her years-long battle with pulmonary fibrosis, Crown Prince Haakon has revealed. Pictured: the royal couple at the Constitution Day parade on May 17

The future Norwegian Queen, 52, first made her battle with the condition, in which breathing becomes increasingly difficult due to scarred lungs, public in 2018

When she first revealed her devastating diagnosis to the world, Mette-Marit explained that the pulmonary fibrosis ‘means my working capacity will vary’ to accommodate her treatment, including ‘periods of time without an official programme’. 

‘For a number of years, I have had health challenges on a regular basis, and now we know more about what is involved,’ she said. ‘The condition means that my working capacity will vary.

‘The Crown Prince and I are choosing to make this public now partly because in future there will be a need to plan periods of time without an official programme to accommodate treatment and when the disease is more active.’

In September, she announced she would take a step back from her duties to ‘undergo a month of pulmonary rehabilitation’. 

Pulmonary fibrosis is incurable and worsens over time, but the Norwegian royal’s doctor, Professor Kristian Bjøro at the National Hospital, said they’d been monitoring her condition for several years and the ‘disease progression has been slow over this period’.

Not much is known about the unusual variant of fibrosis that was detected in Mette-Marit’s lung, but according to the Royal House, ‘there is broad consensus that, unlike other more common types of pulmonary fibrosis, it is not related to environmental or lifestyle factors’.

Earlier this month, she made a rare public appearance for the constitution parade – one of the first times the royal has been spotted wearing an oxygen mask to aid her breathing at a public event. 

Together with her husband, 52, and son, Prince Sverre Magnus, 20, the family watched the children’s parade from their residence, Skaugum in Oslo, Norway.

The trio put on a brave face, waving towards cameras with wide grins, amid an incredibly challenging time for the Norwegian royal family.

Earlier this month, the princess made a rare public appearance for the constitution parade with her husband (right), 52, and son (left), Prince Sverre Magnus, 20 after Mette-Marit’s son, Marius Borg Høiby, was charged with rape and sexual assault in June last year

The Constitution Day parade marked one of the first times the royal has been spotted wearing an oxygen mask to aid her breathing at a public event

Høiby, stepson of the heir to the throne, Crown Prince Haakon, has been under scrutiny since he was repeatedly arrested in 2024 on preliminary charges of bodily harm and criminal damage. Pictured: Marius Borg Høiby and Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway in 2022

Høiby, stepson of the heir to the throne, Crown Prince Haakon, has been under scrutiny since he was repeatedly arrested in 2024 on preliminary charges of bodily harm and criminal damage. Pictured: Marius Borg Høiby and Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway in 2022

Høiby, stepson of the heir to the throne, Crown Prince Haakon, has been under scrutiny since he was repeatedly arrested in 2024 on preliminary charges of bodily harm and criminal damage.

The charges included four counts of rape, four cases of sexual assault and two cases of bodily harm. The Norwegian court is due to deliver a verdict in Høiby’s rape trial on June 15.

Challenges intensified earlier this year again, when the future Queen’s seemingly intimate bond with her ‘sweetheart’, Jeffrey Epstein, came to light – with one email released in the Epstein Files suggesting she was still in contact with the late paedophile financier just months before his death.

While it was known that the Princess had corresponded with Epstein, the intimacy of the emails blows apart any suggestion that the pair were mere associates, with the late paedophile referring to her as ‘twisted’ and ‘not your typical royal’.

Meanwhile, the mother of three, who married Norway’s future King, Crown Prince Haakon in 2001, referred to the disgraced financier as ‘sweetheart’.

In one eyebrow-raising exchange, mutual friend Boris Nikolić, a former adviser to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, asked Epstein if the pair were going to have a baby together.

Nikolić, who references the Norwegian royal in several emails and appears to speculate about her mental and physical health, wrote in April 2012: ‘What happened with Mette now? She wants to carry your kid?’

Epstein’s reply was: ‘Mette Marit is a mess’.

The revelations, which the Crown Princess said were ’embarrassing’ and ‘showed poor judgement’, have put immense strain on the Norwegian monarchy, coming in the same week that Mette-Marit’s son went on trial for the rape of four women.

The emails, sent between 2011 and 2014, show Mette-Marit continued to write to the late paedophile financier despite knowing he had been jailed for procuring an underage girl for prostitution.

They also spent time together in New York when she was on official royal duties in the absence of her husband, although there is no suggestion that she stayed at any of Epstein’s properties.

The 52-year-old royal’s name appeared at least 1,000 times in the Epstein documents released by the US Department of Justice in February.

WHAT IS PULMONARY FIBROSIS?

Pulmonary fibrosis is a condition in which the lungs become scarred and breathing becomes increasingly difficult.

It’s not clear what causes it, but it usually affects people around 70-75 years of age and is rare in people under 50.

Several treatments can help reduce the rate at which IPF gets worse, but there’s currently no treatment that can stop or reverse the scarring of the lungs.

The symptoms of IPF tend to develop gradually and get slowly worse over time.

Symptoms can include:

  • Shortness of breath
  • A persistent dry cough
  • Tiredness
  • Loss of appetite and weight loss
  • Rounded and swollen fingertips also called clubbed fingers 
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There is no cure and it’s very difficult to predict how long someone with IPF will survive at the time of diagnosis.

Regular monitoring over time can indicate whether it’s getting worse quickly or slowly.

Source: NHS Choices

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