Epilepsy

Epilepsy is one of the most prevalent neurological conditions globally, and Africa carries a disproportionately high share of the burden. Across many regions, the treatment gap remains critically wide, meaning a large proportion of individuals with epilepsy receive little or no care.

Section 9.3 · The Evidence

Statistics on epilepsy in Africa.

Indicator Statistic Source
Proportion of global epilepsy cases in LMICs (incl. Africa) ~80% Karger Neuroepidemiology, 2025
Epilepsy prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa vs high-income countries 2–3× higher Klein et al., 2023
Treatment gap in rural sub-Saharan Africa Up to 90% Lancet Global Health, 2024
Primary causes of epilepsy burden Preventable causes Neuroepidemiology Review, 2025
Urban epilepsy prevalence study (Nairobi) First major urban dataset Mwanga et al., 2024

Expert Analysis

What the evidence tells us.

Epilepsy in Africa is overwhelmingly driven by preventable causes such as infections, head trauma, and perinatal complications. Despite this, the treatment gap remains among the highest in the world, meaning most people never receive medication.

— Karger Neuroepidemiology, 2025

Recent urban studies are revealing that epilepsy is not only a rural issue. New data from Nairobi shows a significant hidden burden in informal settlements, where diagnosis and access to care remain extremely limited.

— Mwanga et al., Lancet Global Health, 2024

ANNI Response

How ANNI addresses epilepsy in Africa.

Awareness & Stigma Reduction

Community education programs to reduce stigma and promote early care-seeking behavior.

Referral Systems

Creating structured pathways so suspected cases are connected to diagnostic and treatment services.

Data & Research

Building epilepsy datasets to understand true prevalence and treatment gaps across African regions.