Pope to Health Care Workers: humanity, stewardship,
mission
(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has sent a Message to the
participants in the thirty-first international conference of the Pontifical
Council for Health Care Workers. The theme of this year’s iteration of the
annual conference is: Towards a Culture of Health that is Welcoming and
Supportive: at the Service of People with Rare and Neglected Pathologies.
In his Message to participants, Pope Francis highlights three
“cornerstones” of good care in a Catholic context: the primacy of the human person
along with an integrated, integral awareness of the place of human being within
the economy of creation and the duty to stewardship of the created order; the
missionary and “outward-moving” character of the Church’s commitment to caring
for the sick; the question of justice involved in assuring the necessary care
to people suffering disease – especially rare disease – and without means to
care for themselves or get the care they need.
“On these three cornerstones, which I believe can be shared by
anybody who holds dear the eminent value of the human being,” writes Pope
Francis, “one can identify realistic, courageous, generous and supportive
solutions to addressing even more effectively, and to solving, the health-care
emergency of ‘rare’ and ‘neglected’ diseases.”
The Holy Father goes on to write, “In the name of this love for
man, for every man, above all for suffering man, I express to all of you,
participants in the thirty-first international conference of the Pontifical
Council for Health Care Workers, the wish that you will have a renewed impetus
and generous dedication towards sick people, as well as a tireless drive
towards the greatest common good in the health-care field.”
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