The Pan African Medical Journal -

One of the greatest barriers to action has been the persistent misclassification of NCDs as "lifestyle diseases" of the affluent. This is a dangerous fallacy. In reality, the fastest-growing risk factor for NCDs in Africa is not wealth, but urbanization and poverty.

Street food high in trans-fat is cheaper than a balanced meal. The shift from agricultural labor to sedentary service work happens far faster than the infrastructure for recreational exercise. Meanwhile, the tobacco and alcohol industries aggressively target young populations in growth markets across the continent.

The result is a clinical reality where health workers in rural Malawi or urban Lagos are increasingly seeing patients in their 30s and 40s with hypertensive crises or diabetic ulcers—conditions that require chronic, complex management in systems designed for acute, episodic infectious care. The Pan African Medical Journal

While the journal accepts contributions from anywhere, its primary lens is the African continent. Studies on the African diaspora, South-South collaboration, and comparative health systems are also welcome.

One of the greatest strengths of The Pan African Medical Journal is its editorial team. The Editor-in-Chief is always an African public health leader, currently supported by associate editors from Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, Nigeria, and Rwanda. The journal also maintains a robust statistical review board to ensure methodological rigor. One of the greatest barriers to action has

“We do not lower standards for Africa. We raise the visibility of African science to global standards.” — A former PAMJ senior editor

The Pan African Medical Journal has long documented a specific pathology: the "vertical program hangover." For 20 years, the global community funded disease-specific silos (PEPFAR, The Global Fund). While these programs saved millions of lives, they inadvertently created a two-tiered system where HIV/AIDS gets free viral load testing and dedicated nurses, but a hypertensive patient cannot get a $$2$ monthly dose of a beta-blocker. “We do not lower standards for Africa

When a patient with diabetes presents at a primary care clinic in a rural district:

This is not a failure of individual clinicians. It is a failure of horizontal health system strengthening. Without robust primary care infrastructure that manages longitudinal health (tracking blood pressure over decades, not curing pneumonia in a week), the NCD epidemic will overwhelm tertiary hospitals.