Faith
groups can help boost healthcare in developing nations:
experts
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[July 07, 2015] By
Magdalena Mis
LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) -
Religious groups are an under-used health resource that could help
achieve universal healthcare and accelerate the medical response to
disease outbreaks, health experts said on Tuesday.
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Faith-based organizations such as the Islamic Relief or the
Salvation Army are the only health providers in some regions and the
medical community should build on their experience, reach and
influence to save lives, a study published in the Lancet medical
journal said.
"Religious groups are major players in the delivery of healthcare,
particularly in hard-to-reach and rural areas that are not
adequately served by government," Edward Mills, the author of the
study and a senior epidemiologist at Global Evaluative Sciences in
Canada, said in a statement.
During the Ebola outbreak in West Africa faith groups were key
mediators, persuading communities to drop their custom of embracing
the dead, and providing vital medical services and support.
In Sierra Leone, Muslim and Christian leaders led the United Nations
children's agency (UNICEF) campaign which increased immunization
rates in children to 75 percent from 6 percent.
"It is time for the general medical community to recognize the
magnitude of services offered (by faith-based groups) and partner or
support (them) to provide long-standing improvements in health,"
Mills said.
Faith-based groups already provide immunization, anti-malaria
campaigns, maternal health and HIV services, especially in countries
with weak public health systems, the study said.
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World leaders are due to adopt new development targets, such as
ending poverty, reducing child mortality and tackling climate change
later this year to replace eight expiring U.N. Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs).
The new Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are expected to be
adopted at a U.N. summit in September.
(Reporting by Magdalena Mis, editing by Tim Pearce; Please credit
Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters,
that covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, corruption and
climate change. Visit www.trust.org)
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