• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
Why Many Africans Seek Care Only When They Are Unwell And The Cost Of Waiting

Why Many Africans Seek Care Only When They Are Unwell And The Cost Of Waiting

February 5, 2026
Uganda Law Society Declares Nationwide Strike Over Torture and Rule of Law Concerns

Uganda Law Society Declares Nationwide Strike Over Torture and Rule of Law Concerns

June 25, 2026
UG Catalyst Summit 2026: Uganda Pushes for MSME Formalisation

UG Catalyst Summit 2026: Uganda Pushes for MSME Formalisation

June 25, 2026
UFZEPA Equips Exporters to Meet UK Market Standards for Capsicum and Sesame

UFZEPA Equips Exporters to Meet UK Market Standards for Capsicum and Sesame

June 25, 2026
Uganda Martyrs University Empowers Mpigi Entrepreneurs Through Business Training and Exhibition

Uganda Martyrs University Empowers Mpigi Entrepreneurs Through Business Training and Exhibition

June 25, 2026
Japan Supports Uganda Red Cross and IFRC to Scale Up Ebola Response in Uganda

Japan Supports Uganda Red Cross and IFRC to Scale Up Ebola Response in Uganda

June 24, 2026
UIBFS Successfully Concludes the Women in Leadership Program 2026, Empowering Women to Lead with Confidence and Influence

UIBFS Successfully Concludes the Women in Leadership Program 2026, Empowering Women to Lead with Confidence and Influence

June 24, 2026
False scholarship promises: Born-Again Church Bishop arrested, police rescue 37 children in suspected trafficking

False scholarship promises: Born-Again Church Bishop arrested, police rescue 37 children in suspected trafficking

June 24, 2026
Museveni Reveals First Lady Survived Serious Health Scare

Museveni Reveals First Lady Survived Serious Health Scare

June 24, 2026
Carrefour Uganda Surprises Shoppers With Free Breakfast Across Seven Major Branches

Carrefour Uganda Surprises Shoppers With Free Breakfast Across Seven Major Branches

June 24, 2026
Murder of 18-year-old student leaves troubling questions

Murder of 18-year-old student leaves troubling questions

June 24, 2026
Uganda Police nab security guard with military items

Uganda Police nab security guard with military items

June 24, 2026
US Supreme Court Backs DHS in Landmark Green Card Ruling, Expanding Border Scrutiny for Returning Residents

US Supreme Court Backs DHS in Landmark Green Card Ruling, Expanding Border Scrutiny for Returning Residents

June 24, 2026
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Thursday, June 25, 2026
  • Login
Ugnews Line
  • Home
  • News
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Blogs
  • Tech
  • Agriculture
  • Opinion
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
Ugnews Line
No Result
View All Result
Home Opinion

Why Many Africans Seek Care Only When They Are Unwell And The Cost Of Waiting

by @EditorialNewsline
February 5, 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
0
Sheila Aboth, Head of Brand and Client Experience at C-Care Uganda, explores why normalising prevention is a social, economic, and moral imperative for Africa’s health future.

Sheila Aboth, Head of Brand and Client Experience at C-Care Uganda, explores why normalising prevention is a social, economic, and moral imperative for Africa’s health future.

11
SHARES
62
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterLinkedinWhatsAppEmail

Across many African contexts, healthcare is still largely sought only when illness becomes unavoidable, a pattern that is often interpreted as negligence or lack of awareness. This reflects the realities of access and resources: According to Health Policy Watch, only about 48 % of Africans have access to basic primary healthcare services, leaving millions without convenient entry points for early care

Moreover, according to the African Mission Healthcare, sub-Saharan Africa has just ~1.3 health workers per 1,000 people, far below the WHO-recommended minimum density for routine and preventive services. Even for conditions like childhood illness, data show that up to 15 % of caregivers do not seek formal care at all, and many of those who do typically wait until symptoms are pronounced

Delayed care is not a behavioural problem. It is a design problem.

In many settings, healthcare systems unintentionally condition people to treat medical care as a last resort. Limited infrastructure, overstretched facilities, and shortages of skilled health professionals make proactive care feel inaccessible and inefficient. When systems are difficult to navigate, prevention is quietly deprioritised, and treatment becomes the default entry point into care.

Cultural narratives further reinforce this behaviour. Resilience and endurance are widely celebrated, often at the expense of early health-seeking. Strength is equated with pushing through discomfort, while preventive check-ups are viewed as unnecessary unless symptoms are visible. Over time, this mindset normalises delay and discourages proactive health management.

Economic realities compound the issue. For many individuals and families, healthcare decisions are shaped by cash flow, not long-term outcomes. Preventive care, despite being more cost-effective over time, is often perceived as discretionary spending. In contrast, treatment when illness becomes severe feels unavoidable and therefore justifiable, even when it is significantly more expensive.

The consequences of this approach are profound. Non-communicable diseases now account for the majority of deaths across the continent, many of which could have been mitigated or managed through early detection. When care is delayed, conditions present at more advanced stages, treatment becomes more complex, costs escalate, and outcomes worsen. Beyond the clinical impact, the economic burden on families increases, productivity declines, and quality of life deteriorates. The human cost of watching preventable conditions overwhelm individuals and families is immeasurable.

Addressing this challenge requires a fundamental shift in how healthcare is structured and experienced. The solution is not to blame individuals for rational choices made within constrained systems. The real work lies in redesigning healthcare so that prevention is accessible, affordable, and culturally normalised.

This is where leadership in healthcare comes in.

In practice, this approach is reflected in how care is delivered across the C-Care network. Free blood pressure checks are available at all facilities, enabling early identification of hypertension even among patients who present for unrelated reasons. Beyond routine facility visits, C-Care conducts corporate health visits, mini health camps, and community outreach programmes to proactively engage individuals who would otherwise delay seeking care. These interventions integrate screening with health education, creating earlier entry points into the health system.

Sustainable prevention, however, cannot be achieved by healthcare providers alone. Collaboration with governments, NGOs, employers, and financial institutions is critical to addressing the structural and financial barriers that discourage early care-seeking. Through mobile clinics and health financing solutions such as prepayment and health savings models, access to preventive care is extended while reducing the immediate financial burden on families.

The future of healthcare in Africa, and particularly in Uganda, depends on moving prevention from the margins to the mainstream. This shift will not happen through awareness alone. It will happen when healthcare systems are intentionally designed to meet people where they are, economically, culturally, and geographically and importantly, when leaders commit to prevention as a strategic priority rather than a secondary consideration.

Normalising care before illness is not merely a health aspiration. It is an economic, social, and moral imperative, and we need to address the structural drivers of delayed care and redesign systems around early intervention.

We can build a healthcare future where prevention is no longer the exception, but the standard.

The writer is Sheila Aboth, Head of Brand and Client Experience at C-Care Uganda.

@EditorialNewsline

@EditorialNewsline

Related Posts

Why i joined the SDA Church…..Part 1

Why i joined the SDA Church…..Part 1

by J Andrew
June 20, 2026
0
74

From childhood, I grew up surrounded by different Christian traditions. In my family, there was no single denominational identity. I...

London’s naked bike ride sparks debate over message, meaning, and shock value

London’s naked bike ride sparks debate over message, meaning, and shock value

by Ugnewsline Reporter
June 18, 2026
0
307

Central London’s streets were transformed into an unexpected spectacle on Sunday, June 14, as hundreds of cyclists took part in...

Op-ed : The “R” in Public Relations is a Card You Can Play to Win

Op-ed : The “R” in Public Relations is a Card You Can Play to Win

by @EditorialNewsline
June 16, 2026
0
96

By : Shirley Birungi, Director PR at The Public Relations Association of Uganda (PRAU) Of late, there is a great...

Op-ed: Uganda Has Built Millions of Latrines; Now We Must Make Them Safe

Op-ed: Uganda Has Built Millions of Latrines; Now We Must Make Them Safe

by @EditorialNewsline
June 16, 2026
0
81

By: Sekuma S Peter, Executive Director- NETWAS Uganda The majority of communities already certified as Open Defecation Free are not,...

  • Makerere University’s CEDAT Trains 250 Construction Site Workers

    Makerere University’s CEDAT Trains 250 Construction Site Workers

    15 shares
    Share 6 Tweet 4
  • Makerere’s CHUSS Pledges to Strengthen Collaboration with JICA Program for Japanese Studies

    23 shares
    Share 9 Tweet 6
  • Gov’t, UWASNET Unveil first-ever WASH Impact and Influence Awards’ categories

    35 shares
    Share 14 Tweet 9
  • The search for Miss and Mr University Uganda is Back

    68 shares
    Share 27 Tweet 17
  • The third edition of Business Languages Festival 2025 launched

    28 shares
    Share 11 Tweet 7
Uganda Law Society Declares Nationwide Strike Over Torture and Rule of Law Concerns

Uganda Law Society Declares Nationwide Strike Over Torture and Rule of Law Concerns

June 25, 2026
UG Catalyst Summit 2026: Uganda Pushes for MSME Formalisation

UG Catalyst Summit 2026: Uganda Pushes for MSME Formalisation

June 25, 2026
UFZEPA Equips Exporters to Meet UK Market Standards for Capsicum and Sesame

UFZEPA Equips Exporters to Meet UK Market Standards for Capsicum and Sesame

June 25, 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Ugandan Veterinary Professionals Petition Government Over “Punitive” Licensing Fee Hike

Ugandan Veterinary Professionals Petition Government Over “Punitive” Licensing Fee Hike

April 30, 2026
Over 500 Students Gather at Gayaza High for 11th Annual School Farm Camp

Over 500 Students Gather at Gayaza High for 11th Annual School Farm Camp

August 23, 2025
UCE RESULTS: Fort Portal secondary school shines again

UCE RESULTS: Fort Portal secondary school shines again

February 11, 2025
Sex worker found dead in a lodge, police launch investigation

Sex worker found dead in a lodge, police launch investigation

September 10, 2025
Busoga’s Coffee Farmers Told to Register or Risk Losing Market Share

Busoga’s Coffee Farmers Told to Register or Risk Losing Market Share

1
Members of parliament propose a motion for gov’t to establish waste management fund

Members of parliament propose a motion for gov’t to establish waste management fund

1
Moneylenders guide public on how to steer clear of illegal operators

Moneylenders guide public on how to steer clear of illegal operators

1
Yara, Ministry of Agriculture partners to Strengthen Agricultural Standards

Yara, Ministry of Agriculture partners to Strengthen Agricultural Standards

1
Uganda Law Society Declares Nationwide Strike Over Torture and Rule of Law Concerns

Uganda Law Society Declares Nationwide Strike Over Torture and Rule of Law Concerns

June 25, 2026
UG Catalyst Summit 2026: Uganda Pushes for MSME Formalisation

UG Catalyst Summit 2026: Uganda Pushes for MSME Formalisation

June 25, 2026
UFZEPA Equips Exporters to Meet UK Market Standards for Capsicum and Sesame

UFZEPA Equips Exporters to Meet UK Market Standards for Capsicum and Sesame

June 25, 2026
Uganda Martyrs University Empowers Mpigi Entrepreneurs Through Business Training and Exhibition

Uganda Martyrs University Empowers Mpigi Entrepreneurs Through Business Training and Exhibition

June 25, 2026
Ugnews Line

Copyright © 2024 Ugnewsline.

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Agriculture
  • Opinion
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Sports
    • Crime
    • Business
    • Politics
    • Blogs
  • Tech
  • Agriculture
  • Opinion
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle

Copyright © 2024 Ugnewsline.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.