Pope Francis: ‘Compassion’ is more effective in
addressing inequalities
Pope Francis caresses a sick child in Bambin Gesu hospital.- AFP |
Pope Francis on Saturday sent a letter to the
participants of the 32nd International Conferenceon the theme ‘Addressing
Global Health Inequalities’. The event organized by the
Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development and the International
Confederation of Catholic Health Care Institutions is taking place in the
New Synod Hall of the Vatican from 16 to 18 November.
The letter addressed to Cardinal Peter Kodwo
Appiah Turkson, Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human
Development, the Holy Father stressed that apart from having
well-structured organization for providing necessary services and the best
possible attention to human needs, the healthcare workers should be
attuned to the importance of listening, accompanying and supporting the person
for whom they care. For Pope Francis ‘compassion’ is vital to be
efficient and capable of addressing inequalities.
The Pope concluded the letter exhorting the representatives
of the pharmaceutical companies invited to address the issue of access to
antiretroviral therapies by paediatric patients. Quoting a passage from the New
Charter for Healthcare Workers, Pope Francis called them to make
available essential drugs in adequate quantities, in usable forms of guaranteed
quality, along with correct information, and at costs that are affordable by
individuals and communities.
Please find below the official translation of the
Pope's letter:
To My Venerable Brother
Cardinal Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson
Prefect of the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human
Development
I offer a cordial welcome to the participants in the
Thirty-second International Conference on the theme Addressing Global Health
Inequalities. I express my gratitude to all those who have worked to
organize this event, in particular, to the Dicastery for Promoting Integral
Human Development and the International Confederation of Catholic Health Care
Institutions.
Last year’s Conference took note of encouraging data on the
average life expectancy and on the global fight against pathologies, while at the
same time pointing out the widening gap between the richer and poorer countries
with regard to access to medical products and health-care treatment.
Consequently, it was decided to address the specific issue of inequalities and
the social, economic, environmental and cultural factors underlying them. The
Church cannot remain indifferent to this issue. Conscious of her mission
at the service of human beings created in the image of God, she is bound to
promote their dignity and fundamental rights.
To this end, the New Charter for Health Care Workers states
that “the fundamental right to the preservation of health pertains to the value
of justice, whereby there are no distinctions between peoples and ethnic
groups, taking into account their objective living situations and stages of
development, in pursuing the common good, which is at the same time the good of
all and of each individual” (No. 141). The Church proposed that the right
to health care and the right to justice ought to be reconciled by ensuring a
fair distribution of healthcare facilities and financial resources, in
accordance with the principles of solidarity and subsidiarity. As the
Charter notes, “those responsible for healthcare activities must also allow
themselves to be uniquely and forcefully challenged by the awareness that
‘while the poor of the world continue knocking on the doors of the rich, the
world of affluence runs the risk of no longer hearing those knocks, on account
of a conscience that can no longer distinguish what is human’” (No. 91; Caritas
in Veritate, 75).
I am pleased to learn that the Conference has drafted a
project aimed at concretely addressing these challenges, namely, the
establishment of an operational platform of sharing and cooperation between
Catholic health care institutions in different geographical and social
settings. I willingly encourage those engaged in this project to
persevere in this endeavour, with God’s help. Healthcare workers and
their professional associations in particular are called to this task, since
they are committed to raising awareness among institutions, welfare agencies
and the healthcare industry as a whole, for the sake of ensuring that every
individual actually benefits from the right to health care. Clearly, this
depends not only on healthcare services, but also on complex economic, social,
cultural and decision-making factors. In effect, “the need to resolve the
structural causes of poverty cannot be delayed, not only for the pragmatic
reason of its urgency for the good of society, but because society needs to be
cured of a sickness which is weakening and frustrating it, and which can only
lead to new crises. Welfare projects, which meet certain urgent needs,
should be considered merely temporary responses. As long as the problems
of the poor are not radically resolved by rejecting the absolute autonomy of
markets and financial speculation and by attacking the structural causes of
inequality, no solution will be found for the world’s problems or, for that
matter, to any problems. Inequality is the root of social ills.”
(Evangelii Gaudium, 202).
I would like to focus on one aspect that is fundamental,
especially for those who serve the Lord by caring for the health of their
brothers and sisters. While a well-structured organization is essential
for providing necessary services and the best possible attention to human
needs, healthcare workers should also be attuned to the importance of
listening, accompanying and supporting the persons for whom they care.
In the parable of the Good Samaritan, Jesus shows us the
practical approach required in caring for our suffering neighbour. First,
the Samaritan “sees”. He notices and “is moved with compassion” at the
sight of a person left stripped and wounded along the way. This
compassion is much more than mere pity or sorrow; it shows a readiness to
become personally involved in the other’s situation. Even if we can never
equal God’s own compassion, which fills and renews the heart by its presence,
nonetheless we can imitate that compassion by “drawing near”, “binding wounds”,
“lifting up” and “caring for” our neighbour (cf. Lk 10:33-34).
A healthcare organization that is efficient and capable of
addressing inequalities cannot forget that its raison d’être, which is
compassion: the compassion of doctors, nurses, support staff, volunteers and
all those who are thus able to minimize the pain associated with loneliness and
anxiety.
Compassion is also a privileged way to promote justice,
since empathizing with the others allows us not only to understand their
struggles, difficulties and fears, but also to discover, in the frailness of
every human being, his or her unique worth and dignity. Indeed, human
dignity is the basis of justice, while the recognition of every person’s
inestimable worth is the force that impels us to work, with enthusiasm and
self-sacrifice, to overcome all disparities.
Finally, I would like to address the representatives of the
several pharmaceutical companies who have been invited to Rome to address the
issue of access to antiretroviral therapies by paediatric patients. I
would like to offer for your consideration a passage of the New Charter for
Healthcare Workers. It states: “Although it cannot be denied that the
scientific knowledge and research of pharmaceutical companies have their own
laws by which they must abide – for example, the protection of intellectual
property and a fair profit to support innovation – ways must be found to
combine these adequately with the right of access to basic or necessary
treatments, or both, especially in underdeveloped countries, and above all in
the cases of so-called rare and neglected diseases, which are accompanied by
the notion of orphan drugs. Health care strategies aimed at pursuing
justice and the common good must be economically and ethically
sustainable. Indeed, while they must safeguard the sustainability both of
research and of health care systems, at the same time they ought to make
available essential drugs in adequate quantities, in usable forms of guaranteed
quality, along with correct information, and at costs that are affordable by
individuals and communities” (No. 92).
I thank all of you for the generous commitment with which
you exercise your valued mission. I give you my Apostolic Blessing, and I ask
you to continue to remember me in your prayers.
From the Vatican, 18 November 2017
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