By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu
Faith Should Heal, Not Harm: When Religion Becomes a Barrier to Medical Care
There is a quiet but dangerous trend where some people allow religious beliefs to override basic health decisions. Faith is powerful, but it is not a substitute for medical care.
In some circles, illnesses are quickly labeled as “spiritual attacks” or “tests of faith,” and seeking treatment is discouraged. This has led to preventable suffering, complications, and even death.
Health is not a battlefield between science and spirituality it is a space where both can exist without conflict.
Cases like refusal of blood transfusion or hospital care have become more common in certain religious settings. While personal beliefs deserve respect, they should not cost lives. Medical conditions do not respond to prayers alone when urgent intervention is required.
As one timeless medical principle suggests, “Delay is sometimes more dangerous than the disease itself.” When people are told to “wait on God” instead of seeing a doctor, what they are really doing is allowing treatable conditions to worsen beyond control.
Nigerian doctor and health educator Chinonso Egemba once shared a troubling story about a woman with a diabetic ulcer. Her pastor convinced her that the condition was spiritual and warned her against going to the hospital.
By the time help was considered, the wound had spread from her knee to her toes, severely infected and close to becoming life-threatening. What could have been managed early turned into a near-tragedy.
Aproko Doctor often emphasizes, “Faith is not the opposite of medicine; ignorance is.” His message is clear — prayer should not replace proper diagnosis and treatment.
Medical experts around the world have long warned against neglecting care. William Osler, one of the most respected figures in modern medicine, once said, “The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease.”
This reminds us that health requires attention, action, and responsibility. Belief should support healing, not block it. In the end, protecting life is not a lack of faith, it is wisdom.
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