Perhaps the starkest illustration of Africa's neurohealth crisis is the extreme shortage of specialist physicians. The data reveal a continent-wide emergency that no single organisation can solve alone — but that every organisation like ANNI must help address.
Statistics on the workforce crisis.
| Indicator | Statistic | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Neurologists per 100,000 — Africa | 0.03 | Klein et al., 2023; Aderinto, 2023 |
| Neurologists per 100,000 — Europe | 8.45 | Klein et al., 2023 |
| Neurologists per 100,000 — high-income countries | 7.1 | World Congress of Neurology, 2023 |
| African countries with NO neurologists | 10 countries | Kissani et al., 2022 |
| Child neurologists across Africa | 324 total | Charway-Felli, WCN 2023 |
| Child neurologists per 100,000 — Africa | 0.01 | World Federation of Neurology, 2023 |
| Average neurology workforce density | 0.12 per 100,000 | The Lancet Neurology, 2024 |
| African countries meeting WHO minimum | Only 1 | WFN / WCN 2023 |
| Neurosurgeons serving Africa | 1,974 total | Ukachukwu et al., 2022 |
| Annual neurosurgery gap | 2 million cases | Ukachukwu et al., 2022 |
| Ghana neurosurgeon ratio | 1 : 1,240,000 | Abu-Bonsrah et al., 2022 |
Expert Analysis
What the evidence tells us.
The shortage of neurologists in Africa is not simply a workforce problem — it reflects decades of under-investment in medical training, infrastructure, and brain health policy. At the 2023 World Congress of Neurology, Dr. Augustina Charway-Felli, President of the African Academy of Neurology, called for urgent action, noting that Africa has a population of 1.37 billion and growing, served by a neurology workforce that is entirely inadequate for the disease burden faced.
— Charway-Felli, WCN 2023; The Lancet Neurology, 2024A systematic review published in the Journal of Neurosurgery projected that even at an exponential growth rate of 7.03% per year, Africa will have a deficit of more than 5,000 neurosurgeons by 2030 relative to population-based workforce targets. Meeting the 2030 target would require scaling the current growth rate to nearly 16% per year — a figure that makes international collaboration and capacity-building initiatives like ANNI's critical.
— Ukachukwu et al., J Neurosurg, 2022ANNI's Response
How ANNI is responding to the specialist shortage.
Pillar 2 · Early Screening
Addresses the shortage by training community health workers and primary care providers to conduct basic neuro-risk screening, creating an early detection layer that reduces pressure on specialists.
Pillar 5 · Capacity Building
Addresses the shortage at source by supporting training programs for healthcare workers and partnering with African medical schools and neuroscience societies.
