NG · NGA
Informational only — not medical advice. In an emergency, always call your local emergency number. Availability can change; verify before travel.
New cases / 100k
115
Annual incidence
Deaths / 100k
90
Stroke mortality
DALYs / 100k
2,100
Healthy years lost
Reference year 2021. Rates per 100,000 population unless noted.
Emergency numbers
Emergency (national)112CT and MRI are limited to larger hospitals; 24/7 availability and affordability are major constraints.
Formal pre-hospital EMS coverage is limited and uneven; most patients arrive by private transport. Acute stroke services are concentrated in teaching and tertiary hospitals.
Patients usually self-present, often after delays. Recognition and CT are available mainly in tertiary centres; thrombolysis is rare and thrombectomy largely unavailable in the public system.
2 centers
| Center | 24/7 ED | Stroke unit | CT 24/7 | Thrombolysis | Thrombectomy | Rehab | Tele-stroke |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | Limited | Limited | No | No | Limited | Unknown | |
| Yes | Limited | Limited | No | No | Limited | Unknown |
Listings are illustrative and may be incomplete. Capabilities can change — confirm directly with each center before relying on this information.
The National Health Insurance Authority scheme has limited population coverage; most stroke care is paid out of pocket.
Private insurance and HMOs cover a small, mostly urban and formally employed minority.
Out-of-pocket payment dominates and is a primary barrier to imaging, medicines, and rehabilitation.
Coverage gaps are well documented; specific cost figures omitted where not reliably sourced.
Awareness, prevention, and survivor support across Nigeria.
The vertical marker on each bar shows the regional average.
Last verified June 9, 2026. Found something out of date? Report incorrect info.
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Made with care for survivors and caregivers.