Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka is a leprosy endemic country with one of the highest incidences of the disease globally. Low levels of leprosy awareness were identified as one of the reasons for high prevalence. In order to address this low awareness, inter-faith communities were mobilized by trained church leaders to wo...

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Main Authors: James Samuel Pender, Cletus Praveen Gomez, Ranasinghe Arachchige Tuder Mahesh Perera, John Anthony Williams, Ravindran Roshan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Health for All Nations 2019-01-01
Series:Christian Journal for Global Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.cjgh.org/index.php/cjgh/article/view/297/687
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spelling doaj-ce0f72e6d8f24472a306908454927a6e2021-01-02T12:03:15ZengHealth for All NationsChristian Journal for Global Health2167-24152019-01-0162263210.15566/cjgh.v6i2.297297Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri LankaJames Samuel Pender0Cletus Praveen Gomez1Ranasinghe Arachchige Tuder Mahesh Perera2John Anthony Williams3Ravindran Roshan4Programmes and Advocacy Officer – Asia, The Leprosy Mission England and Wales, United KingdomAlliance Development Trust, Sri LankaAlliance Development Trust, Sri LankaAlliance Development Trust, Sri LankaAlliance Development Trust, Sri LankaSri Lanka is a leprosy endemic country with one of the highest incidences of the disease globally. Low levels of leprosy awareness were identified as one of the reasons for high prevalence. In order to address this low awareness, inter-faith communities were mobilized by trained church leaders to work together to increase leprosy awareness, reduce stigma, and support people affected by leprosy, building strong relationships across inter-religious divides in the process. The efforts were highly successful with over 30,000 people involved in leprosy awareness events. This indicates that faith communities can be an important partner for development agencies and governments; churches can make an impact in improving health outcomes, even where the members are a persecuted minority, as well as contribute to inter-communal peacebuilding efforts.https://journal.cjgh.org/index.php/cjgh/article/view/297/687leprosyhealthchurchinter-faithsri lanka
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Samuel Pender
Cletus Praveen Gomez
Ranasinghe Arachchige Tuder Mahesh Perera
John Anthony Williams
Ravindran Roshan
spellingShingle James Samuel Pender
Cletus Praveen Gomez
Ranasinghe Arachchige Tuder Mahesh Perera
John Anthony Williams
Ravindran Roshan
Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri Lanka
Christian Journal for Global Health
leprosy
health
church
inter-faith
sri lanka
author_facet James Samuel Pender
Cletus Praveen Gomez
Ranasinghe Arachchige Tuder Mahesh Perera
John Anthony Williams
Ravindran Roshan
author_sort James Samuel Pender
title Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri Lanka
title_short Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri Lanka
title_full Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Church-led Partnerships with Interfaith Religious Leaders and Government for Raising Awareness on Leprosy in Sri Lanka
title_sort church-led partnerships with interfaith religious leaders and government for raising awareness on leprosy in sri lanka
publisher Health for All Nations
series Christian Journal for Global Health
issn 2167-2415
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Sri Lanka is a leprosy endemic country with one of the highest incidences of the disease globally. Low levels of leprosy awareness were identified as one of the reasons for high prevalence. In order to address this low awareness, inter-faith communities were mobilized by trained church leaders to work together to increase leprosy awareness, reduce stigma, and support people affected by leprosy, building strong relationships across inter-religious divides in the process. The efforts were highly successful with over 30,000 people involved in leprosy awareness events. This indicates that faith communities can be an important partner for development agencies and governments; churches can make an impact in improving health outcomes, even where the members are a persecuted minority, as well as contribute to inter-communal peacebuilding efforts.
topic leprosy
health
church
inter-faith
sri lanka
url https://journal.cjgh.org/index.php/cjgh/article/view/297/687
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