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Pope Leo calls universal healthcare a 'moral imperative'

Pope Leo calls universal healthcare a 'moral imperative'

By Joshua McElweeWed, March 18, 2026 at 9:52 AM UTC

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Pope Leo XIV holds the weekly general audience in Saint Peter's Square at the Vatican, March 18, 2026. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

By Joshua McElwee

VATICAN CITY, March 18 (Reuters) - Pope Leo made a plea on Wednesday for countries ‌to offer their citizens universal healthcare, calling it ‌a "moral imperative" that people have access to the health services they need.

Previous ​popes have called for countries to offer universal healthcare, but calling an issue a "moral imperative" is an unusually strong term for a pope to use, indicating that something is ‌required by Catholic ⁠teaching.

"Universal health coverage is … a moral imperative for societies that wish to call themselves just," ⁠the pope said in a meeting with participants in a healthcare conference organised by the World Health Organization and ​European bishops.

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"Healthcare ​must be accessible to ​the most vulnerable … not ‌only because their dignity requires it but also to prevent injustice from becoming a cause of conflict," he said. "Health cannot be a luxury for the few."

Leo's predecessor, Pope Francis, called in 2021 for healthcare systems to be "accessible to ‌all", citing Italy's tax-funded health ​service as an example.

Leo is the ​first pope from ​the United States, which does not have ‌universal health coverage. At Wednesday's ​meeting, he urged ​bishops in Europe to address inequalities in healthcare.

"Only together can we build communities of solidarity capable of ​caring for everyone," ‌said the pope. "Caring for the humanity of others ​helps us to live our own lives to ​the full."

(Editing by Timothy Heritage)

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