Strengthening African Healthcare Systems: Lessons from Cervical Cancer for Local Innovation, DigitalSolutions, Holistic Healthcare, and Sustainable Investment

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21380556

Keywords:

Cervical Cancer, Healthcare Access, Intellectual Property Rights, Local Pharmaceutical Manufacturing, Global Health Equity

Abstract

This essay explores the structural and systemic challenges facing healthcare systems in Africa, using cervical cancer as a case study to examine broader health inequities and opportunities for reform. Despite being largely preventable and treatable, cervical cancer remains a leading cause of cancer-related deaths among African women, underscoring gaps in public health education, vaccine access, treatment availability, and policy implementation. Drawing on both scientific research and personal experience, the essay highlights how issues such as limited screening infrastructure, weak pharmaceutical production, restrictive intellectual property laws, lack of education, and cultural hesitancy contribute to preventable mortality. Key solutions are proposed, including investing in local drug manufacturing, expanding digital health tools, integrating traditional and modern medical systems, and prioritising public health education. While cervical cancer serves as the focal point, the insights presented are applicable to a wide range of high-burden diseases, both communicable including HIV, tuberculosis, and non-communicable including cancer, diabetes, and hypertension. Ultimately, the essay advocates for an African-led approach to healthcare innovation that is equitable and sustainable.

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Published

2026-07-15

How to Cite

Strengthening African Healthcare Systems: Lessons from Cervical Cancer for Local Innovation, DigitalSolutions, Holistic Healthcare, and Sustainable Investment. (2026). Journal of Academics Stand Against Poverty , 9(Special Issue), 108-140. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.21380556