Vatican City, Feb 10, 2022 / 13:00 pm
Pope Francis on Thursday called lack of access to basic health care a “social virus” and said that the antidote is a “culture of fraternity.”
In a video message ahead of the 30th World Day of the Sick, observed every year on Feb. 11, Francis recalled a lesson of the COVID-19 pandemic, that illness is “a global and not a merely individual phenomenon.”
“It invites us to reflect on other types of ‘pathologies’ that threaten humanity and the world,” he said on Feb. 10. He highlighted individualism and indifference toward others, which he said were “forms of selfishness that unfortunately end up being amplified in the society of consumerist wellbeing and economic liberalism.”
“The consequent inequalities,” he continued, “are found even in the field of health care, where some enjoy so-called ‘excellence’ and many others struggle to access basic health care.”