Scientology Church members Marked World Health Day in Europe and Beyond

Scientology Marks World Health Day Through Drug Prevention, Blood Donation and Community Health Initiatives

Brussels, Brussels, Belgium, 16th Apr 2026 — Churches of Scientology in several countries marked World Health Day 2026 through a range of activities intended to support both physical well-being and social responsibility, underscoring the place health holds within Scientology’s broader social betterment and humanitarian efforts.

Scientology Church members Marked World Health Day in Europe and Beyond

While the forms of observance differed from one community to another, the underlying theme was consistent: health was approached not only as a medical matter, but as something closely connected to knowledge, responsibility, human dignity and the ability of individuals to lead stable and constructive lives. In Scientology, that understanding has long informed both religious practice and a range of community-based initiatives inspired by founder L. Ron Hubbard.

This year’s observances included drug prevention programming, blood donation efforts and other health-oriented local activities shaped according to the needs of each community. Together, they reflected a practical view shared across many Scientology churches: that support for health can take different forms, from prevention and education to direct assistance and volunteer service.

A broad view of health

For Scientology, concern for health has never been limited to physical condition alone. The Church’s religious teachings and humanitarian programs have long linked personal well-being with ethical conduct, clarity of thought, responsibility and care for others. Physical and spiritual health are therefore seen not as separate matters, but as closely related dimensions of a person’s ability to live productively and contribute to society.

This perspective helps explain why health-related initiatives have become a recurring feature of Scientology’s public-interest activities. Programs dealing with drug prevention, moral values, community service and volunteer assistance all rest, in different ways, on the idea that healthier individuals are better able to build healthier communities.

One of the most visible World Health Day initiatives this year was a special marathon broadcast on Scientology Network on April 7. The programming highlighted the work of the Foundation for a Drug-Free World, a long-running drug education initiative that provides factual information about drugs and their effects so that young people and adults can make informed choices.

The marathon included episodes of Voices for Humanity, public service announcements addressing the dangers of drug use, and material connected to The Truth About Drugs campaign. The focus on prevention reflected a central principle in Scientology-supported social action: that many forms of suffering are best addressed before they take root.

Drug prevention has therefore remained one of the best-known areas of Scientology’s social engagement, particularly through partnerships with schools, educators, youth groups and community organizations. By emphasizing factual information rather than sensationalism, these initiatives seek to help individuals avoid patterns of dependency that can damage health, family stability and social cohesion.

Different churches, different forms of service

World Health Day was also marked through more direct forms of civic solidarity. In Milan, for example, the Church of Scientology hosted a blood donation day on April 9 in cooperation with AVIS Milano, part of the wider Italian Association of Blood Volunteers. The initiative continued a collaboration already established over the years and repeated several times annually.

For the occasion, an AVIS mobile blood collection unit was received at the Church’s facilities in Viale Fulvio Testi, allowing long-time donor Volunteer Ministers to continue giving blood regularly while also giving newer volunteers an opportunity to begin participating in blood donation as a form of community service. The event unfolded in a spirit of participation and awareness, with a simple but essential purpose: helping support a health system that depends on regular voluntary donations.

That initiative in Milan illustrated how local Scientology communities can cooperate with civic and healthcare-oriented organizations in practical ways that respond to immediate social needs. Blood donation remains one of the clearest examples of how ordinary citizens can directly support medical care and save lives. In this context, it also reflected a broader understanding that public health is strengthened not only by institutions, but by communities willing to act in a spirit of solidarity.

Other churches and groups marked the day in ways suited to their local environments. In some places, education and prevention were the primary focus. In others, practical acts of support, volunteer engagement and public awareness took center stage. This diversity of responses reflected the Church’s view that health is not addressed only in clinics or hospitals, but also through the everyday choices, habits and responsibilities that shape both personal and collective life.

The role of Scientology Volunteer Ministers in some of these activities also highlighted a long-standing emphasis on service. The Volunteer Minister program, known for providing practical assistance in community settings and times of need, approaches help in a broad sense, including physical support, moral encouragement and attention to spiritual well-being.

Health as a foundation for social betterment

The different World Health Day observances ultimately pointed to the same idea: that health is foundational to human flourishing and therefore central to any serious effort at social reform and social betterment. A person affected by drug abuse, poor health or social neglect is less able to exercise freedom, judgment and responsibility. A person supported by prevention, education and community care is better placed to live with dignity and to contribute positively to others.

This is why Scientology communities have long considered support for physical and spiritual health to be a cornerstone of their wider social engagement. Whether through drug education, blood donation, volunteer service or other local initiatives, these efforts are intended to strengthen the conditions in which individuals and communities can thrive.

Ivan Arjona, Scientology’s representative to the European Union, the OSCE, the Council of Europe and the United Nations, said the various observances of World Health Day reflected a principle with strong relevance across Europe.

“World Health Day offers an opportunity to remember that health is both physical and human,” Arjona said. “A society protects health not only through medicine and treatment, important as those are, but also through prevention, education, solidarity and the strengthening of personal responsibility. When communities work to prevent drug abuse, support blood donation or engage in local health-oriented service, they are helping defend both well-being and human dignity.”

He added: “The common thread is care for life and respect for the individual. Across Europe, these are deeply rooted civic values. Activities that strengthen the body, protect the mind and support responsible citizenship also strengthen the social fabric, and that is why this work matters.”

At a time when many societies are facing pressure on healthcare systems, concern over addiction and broader questions about resilience and social cohesion, these observances offered a reminder that community-based action still has an important role to play. Whether through factual education about drugs, direct support for blood banks or other locally organized health initiatives, Scientology communities used World Health Day to affirm a consistent principle: that health is essential to individual dignity, and that supporting it is both a personal and a civic responsibility.

The Church of Scientology, its churches, missions, groups and members are present across the European continent. Scientology Europe reports a continent-wide presence through more than 140 churches, missions and affiliated groups in at least 27 European nations, alongside thousands of community-based social betterment and reform initiatives focused on education, prevention and neighbourhood-level support, inspired by the work of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard.

Within Europe’s diverse national frameworks for religion, the Church’s recognitions continue to expand, with administrative and judicial authorities in Spain, Portugal, Sweden, the Netherlands, Italy, Germany Slovakia and others, as well as the European Court of Human Rights, having addressed and acknowledged Scientology communities as protected by the national and international provisions of Freedom of Religion or belief.

Media Contact

Organization: European Office Church of Scientology for Public Affairs and Human Rights

Contact Person: Ivan Arjona

Website: https://www.scientologyeurope.org

Email: Send Email

Address:Boulevard de Waterloo 103

City: Brussels

State: Brussels

Country:Belgium

Release id:44098

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