Former US President Bill Clinton has left hospital after being admitted last week for a urological infection.
Live video shows the former Democratic leader, 75, leaving the hospital in Southern California with his wife Hillary on Sunday.
Clinton, will return to New York and remain on antibiotics, Dr. Alpesh Amin, who had been overseeing his care at the hospital, said in a statement released by Clinton's spokesman.
His fever and white blood cell count have normalised, Amin added.
The former president had been in California for an event for his foundation and was treated at the University of California Irvine Medical Center's intensive care unit after suffering from fatigue and being admitted on Tuesday.

He was seen leaving the hospital with his wife and former Secretary of State and 2016 presidential frontrunner Hillary.
Upon being admitted, his spokesman Mr Urena said in a statement: "On Tuesday evening former president Bill Clinton was admitted to UCI Medical center for treatment of a non-Covid infection.
"He is on the mend, in good spirits, and incredibly thankful to the doctors, nurses and staff providing him with excellent care."
CNN reported that Clinton was put in the intensive care unit primarily to give him privacy.
He was not on a breathing machine, according to doctors who treated the former president.

Mr Clinton has had a number of health issues over the years, including a 2004 quadruple bypass surgery and a 2010 procedure to open a blocked artery in his heart with two stents.
But it is understood that his latest hospital admission had nothing to do with his heart condition.
The former Arkansas governor served two terms as US president from January 1993 and January 2001, and his wife Hillary made a failed bid to become the first American president in 2016, when she lost the election to Donald Trump.
Mr Clinton was impeached in 1998 by the Republican-led House of Representatives over his sexual relationship with White House intern Monica Lewinsky but remained in office when the Senate acquitted him in 1999.