Health worker Srijana Adhikari provides a leprosy patient with medicine
Meet health worker Srijana Adhikari
Health worker Srijana Adhikari treating a leprosy patient

I am happy that we now can also treat people preventively

LPEP Coordinator Srijana Adhikari

NLR Nepal is a frontrunner in the implementation of the Leprosy Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (LPEP) pilot. The project aims to assess the feasibility, acceptability, cost efficiency, and efficacy of chemoprophylaxis as a leprosy control strategy. It seeks to reduce the number of new cases of leprosy and prevent disability through early-stage detection of the disease.

Moreover, NLR Nepal promotes a Disability-Friendly Communities model. In this concept, communities, government agencies, and other relevant stakeholders become responsible and accountable towards fulfilling the rights of persons with disabilities, including persons affected by leprosy, as provisioned in laws, policies, and programmes. We pursue the full integration of persons with a disability, so they can play an active part in society and lead a normal life.

What have we achieved in Nepal?

Our results of last year

12,328

Direct contacts treated preventitive

1,244

Persons trained in self-care

70

Disabled people organisations received assistance

404

People received a microcredit

See all results

Stop the transmission of Leprosy!

NLR interrupts leprosy transmission by treating both patients and their contacts. However, does our approach work in the field? Read how we find out.

Promoting persons with disabilities’ rights

Learn how we include persons with disabilities caused by leprosy and other diseases in mainstream development by promoting disability-inclusive development.