The Role of Community Leaders in Bridging the Divide

Published on December 14, 2025

In the midst of the contentious and polarized environment of the 2025 South Carolina measles outbreak, a critical breakthrough came not from public health officials or law enforcement, but from within the affected community itself. As the relationship between the state and the community deteriorated, trusted local leaders—pastors, elders, and other respected figures—stepped into the void to become essential mediators, translators, and advocates. Their role was instrumental in de-escalating the crisis and ultimately bringing the outbreak under control.

A Bridge of Trust

The turning point in the crisis came when DHEC officials, realizing their direct communication efforts were failing, shifted their strategy. They began working with a coalition of local pastors from the affected religious community. These pastors, who held the deep trust of their congregations, were able to communicate public health messages in a way that was culturally and religiously resonant. They explained the science of measles and the rationale for quarantine in the context of their faith's teachings on community care and protecting the vulnerable.

"We were the bridge," one of the pastors later told a WHO panel studying the outbreak. "The state had the scientific information, but we had the trust. By working together, we were able to translate that information into a language our community could understand and accept. We weren't asking them to trust the government; we were asking them to trust us."

Lessons in Community Engagement

The success of this partnership provided a powerful lesson in the importance of community engagement in public health. The experience in South Carolina demonstrated that for public health interventions to be successful, particularly in close-knit or insular communities, they must be implemented in partnership with, not imposed upon, the community. The CDC has since incorporated this model into its national guidelines for outbreak response, emphasizing the need to identify and collaborate with trusted community leaders as a core strategy. The quiet heroism of these local leaders, who risked their own social standing to bridge the divide between science and faith, was a key factor in ending the Palmetto State's public health crisis.

A pastor speaking with members of his congregation.
Trusted community leaders became essential mediators in the crisis. Image: Pexels.