By Saleh Farouq Gagarawa, ANIPR
Nigeria has made significant progress in the fight against leprosy through improved diagnosis, treatment, and disease-control strategies. However, one critical issue remains largely neglected: what happens to persons affected by leprosy after treatment ends?
Across many communities in Nigeria, thousands of persons affected by leprosy continue to live with disabilities, mobility challenges, stigma, psychological trauma, unemployment, and social exclusion. These challenges persist not because solutions are unavailable, but because rehabilitation services remain centralized and inaccessible to many who need them most.
Most rehabilitation interventions are concentrated in urban referral centers and specialist institutions, forcing many affected persons to travel long distances to seek assistance. For individuals already burdened by poverty, stigma, and transportation difficulties, accessing such services becomes nearly impossible.
As a result, support systems often end immediately after multidrug therapy, leaving many medically cured but socially and economically vulnerable.
Nigeria must begin a serious shift toward decentralized community-based rehabilitation for persons affected by leprosy. Rehabilitation services should be integrated into primary healthcare systems and brought closer to local communities where affected persons live.
Services such as physiotherapy, wound care, mental health support, disability assessment, assistive devices, vocational training, and livelihood support should become accessible at community level rather than remaining referral-based services.
A decentralized rehabilitation system would reduce preventable disabilities, improve reintegration outcomes, and ensure that affected persons receive continuous support beyond medical treatment.
The impact goes beyond healthcare. Lack of rehabilitation can affect education, employment, family stability, mobility, and community participation. In many cases, exclusion becomes a cycle that affects entire households and future generations.
Rehabilitation should therefore not be viewed merely as a medical intervention, but as a strategy for social inclusion and human dignity.
There is also a need for government to develop a National Decentralized Rehabilitation Framework integrated into primary healthcare and disability support systems. Such a framework should establish community rehabilitation standards, strengthen referral systems, and create rehabilitation outreach services across endemic areas.
Technology can also support these efforts through digital mapping of rehabilitation needs, tele-support systems, and data-driven planning mechanisms.
Development partners must equally recognize rehabilitation as a strategic investment rather than a charitable addition. Sustainable leprosy elimination cannot be achieved if survivors remain excluded after treatment.
The future of leprosy programming should not only measure treatment completion rates, but also assess how many people regain dignity, independence, and meaningful participation in society.
The critical question remains: Is survival alone enough, or should the goal be full reintegration and human dignity?