Stroke

Stroke is one of the most devastating neurological conditions in Africa, with a pattern that is fundamentally different from high-income countries. Africans experience strokes at younger ages, with more severe outcomes, and with significantly limited access to treatment and rehabilitation services.

Statistics on the African stroke burden.

Indicator Statistic Source
Annual stroke incidence in Africa Up to 316 per 100,000 Akinyemi et al., Nature Rev Neurol 2021
Stroke prevalence in Africa Up to 1,460 per 100,000 Akinyemi et al., 2021
3-year stroke fatality rate Up to 84% Okekunle et al., 2023
1-month case fatality 24.45% Okekunle et al., 2023
Stroke risk vs Western countries 2–3× higher Akinyemi et al.
Hypertension contribution ~90% Tanzania Registry Study
Peak stroke age 40–60 years Akinyemi et al.
Case fatality range 21%–47% Okekunle et al.
Global stroke deaths from LMICs 86% Global Neurology Report
Hospital study sample size 170,501 patients PMC 2025

Expert Analysis

What the evidence tells us.

Evidence published in Nature Reviews Neurology confirms that Africa may now have 2–3 times greater stroke incidence than western Europe and the United States. Critically, many Africans experience strokes during their fourth to sixth decades of life — affecting economically productive individuals during peak years of family responsibility and community contribution.

— Akinyemi et al., Nature Reviews Neurology, 2021

A multi-centre registry study in Tanzania (2024) covering 1,000 admitted stroke patients found that hypertension was present in 90.1% of cases, making it by far the dominant risk factor. Diabetes and prior stroke were the next most common. These findings underscore the critical importance of preventive screening and blood pressure management — exactly what ANNI's Pillar 2 and Pillar 3 programs target.

— Tanzania Multi-Centre Stroke Registry, Clinical eHealth, 2024

The African Stroke Organization (ASO) has identified four core pillars for reducing Africa's stroke burden: research, capacity-building, development of stroke services, and promotion of stroke awareness. ANNI's own five-pillar model is directly aligned with this framework.

— Akinyemi et al., 2021

ANNI's Response

How ANNI is responding to the stroke burden.

Pillar 1 · Awareness

Delivers public education on stroke warning signs such as FAST symptoms, adapted for African languages and community settings to improve early recognition.

Pillar 2 · Screening

Focuses on blood pressure and diabetes screening, addressing the key modifiable risk factors driving stroke burden across African populations.

Pillar 4 · Research Hub

Builds stroke patient registries to generate African-specific data on incidence, outcomes, and treatment gaps for evidence-based policymaking.