The head of a Vatican delegation to the World Health Assembly on
Wednesday called for universal health care coverage and an “integral”
approach to health care that responds to a person’s spiritual needs.
Archbishop Zygmunt Zimowski, head of the Pontifical Council for Pastoral
Assistance to Health Care Workers, stressed the need for “integral
development.” This approach, he said, does not focus only on health care
or economic growth, but also attends to “the spiritual state of the
person.”
“Health and development ought to be integral if they are to respond
fully to the needs of every human person. What we hold important is the
human person - each person, each group of people, and humanity as a
whole,” he said May 22 to the 66th World Health Assembly.
The archbishop said that health care contributes to the development of
nations “and benefits from it.” He said that the Holy See “strongly
believes” that universal health care coverage as a goal of government
policy is a more certain way to achieve “the wide range of health
concerns,” including preserving present advances.
Archbishop Zimowski then turned to efforts to save the lives of millions
of people who die each year “from conditions that can easily be
prevented.” He praised a resolution before the assembly to improve the
quality, supply and use of 13 “life-saving commodities.”
“The Holy See strongly agrees with the need to achieve further
reductions in the loss of life and prevention of illness through
increased access to inexpensive interventions that are respectful of the
life and dignity of all mothers and children at all stages of life,
from conception to natural death,” he said.
However, he voiced “serious concerns” about the assembly’s secretariat
report and its executive board-recommended resolution that includes
“emergency contraception.” He said some of these drugs have an
abortifacient effect.
“For my delegation, it is totally unacceptable to refer to a medical
product that constitutes a direct attack on the life of the child in
utero as a ‘life-saving commodity’ and, much worse, to encourage
‘increasing use of such substances in all parts of the world’,” he said.
The archbishop welcomed the assembly’s proposed global action plan to
control non-communicable diseases. He said his delegation was
“especially pleased” that the plan recognizes the “key role” of civil
society institutions including faith-based organizations in encouraging
the prevention and treatment of these diseases.
“Our delegation is aware that Catholic Church-inspired organizations and
institutions throughout the world already have committed themselves to
pursue such actions at global, regional, and local community levels,” he
said.
Archbishop Zimowski also voiced interest in aspects of preventing and
controlling diseases in older age, noting faith-based institutions’ long
tradition of care for the aged and the rapid growth of the elderly
population.
He noted that the Vatican will host an international
conference Nov. 21-23 about caring for the elderly with
neurodegenerative diseases.