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Hypertension and Other Nigerian Tensions -By Patrick Iwelunmor

The emotional fatigue visible across Nigeria today should concern us deeply. We are becoming a nation of exhausted people smiling publicly while privately battling fear, uncertainty and silent despair. Many Nigerians no longer sleep properly because worries have become nocturnal companions. Families now discuss the prices of rice, fuel and medication with the same intensity previous generations reserved for national crises. Our blood pressure is rising alongside the cost of living.

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On May 17, the world observed World Hypertension Day with the familiar conversations about salt intake, exercise and routine blood pressure checks. In Nigeria, however, hypertension has become something far more troubling than a medical condition. It is now a social condition, an economic condition and, increasingly, a national psychological condition. Nigeria today feels like a country permanently trapped in tension. Millions wake each morning not with optimism but with calculations about survival: transport fares that rise without warning, electricity tariffs that increase while darkness persists, rents that become unbearable, school fees that stretch households to breaking point, and food prices that transform ordinary feeding into a daily crisis. These are not abstract economic inconveniences. They are pressures accumulating silently inside the bloodstream of a nation.

Recent studies estimate that hypertension affects roughly one in every three Nigerian adults, while millions remain undiagnosed or untreated. The Nigerian Cardiac Society has repeatedly warned about the frightening rise in cases of high blood pressure, stroke and cardiovascular disease. Yet the true danger lies not merely in the numbers but in how normalised stress has become within Nigerian society. We now live in a country where anxiety has woven itself into ordinary life. The trader in Lagos struggling to restock goods because prices change between morning and evening. The civil servant whose salary disappears within days. The father deciding whether to buy food, refill the generator or purchase medication for his diabetic wife. The graduate carrying certificates from one office to another in search of jobs that no longer exist. These are not isolated frustrations. They are daily realities for millions of Nigerians whose bodies absorb economic instability as physiological stress.

Hypertension is often called the “silent killer”, but in Nigeria, the silence is becoming increasingly loud. It echoes through overcrowded hospitals, tense marketplaces and homes weighed down by uncertainty. Inflation may sound like technical economic vocabulary to policymakers, but for ordinary Nigerians inflation has become biological. According to recent economic data, Nigeria’s inflation rate climbed to 15.69 per cent in April 2026, driven largely by surging food prices, transportation costs, healthcare expenses and energy tariffs. Food inflation remains particularly devastating because feeding, once basic, has become emotionally traumatic for many households. Families that once ate comfortably now ration meals. Parents skip meals so children can eat. Pensioners split medication into halves to prolong survival. Young professionals spend almost their entire income maintaining existence rather than building a future. Increasingly, Nigerians are no longer living; they are merely surviving.

Medical experts have long established the connection between prolonged stress and hypertension, stroke, kidney failure and cardiovascular disease. In Nigeria, stress is no longer occasional; it has become structural. Every aspect of daily existence appears designed to elevate blood pressure. Long hours of power outages produce frustration and sleep deprivation. The collapse of public infrastructure means citizens must privately provide what government should ordinarily guarantee. Nigerians now pay simultaneously for electricity and generators, for public water and boreholes, for public security and private guards, for public healthcare and expensive private alternatives. This exhausting duplication of survival responsibilities has created a society permanently living in fight-or-flight mode.

Beyond inflation and economic hardship, insecurity has become another deadly contributor to Nigeria’s growing hypertension crisis. Across many parts of the country, travelling by road now carries a frightening psychological burden. Highways that once connected families and commerce have increasingly become corridors of fear haunted by kidnappers, bandits and terrorists. From the Abuja–Kaduna expressway to roads across several vulnerable regions, Nigerians now embark on journeys with silent prayers and visible anxiety. Families remain tense until loved ones arrive safely. Many now avoid interstate travel unless absolutely necessary, while others endure journeys with elevated fear and mental exhaustion. A businessman travelling for work, a student returning to school, a mother visiting relatives — all now move through the country carrying the invisible weight of uncertainty. Fear, after all, is also a blood pressure problem.

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Perhaps nowhere is this contradiction more painful than within the healthcare system itself. Healthcare inflation in Nigeria has risen sharply, worsened by currency depreciation, dependence on imported drugs and the rising cost of pharmaceutical products. Routine medical care that once seemed basic now feels financially intimidating to millions of citizens. Blood pressure medications, diagnostic tests and specialist consultations increasingly sit beyond the reach of low-income Nigerians. As a result, countless people postpone treatment, resort to self-medication or rely entirely on prayer and herbal alternatives because hospitals themselves have become symbols of financial distress. The tragedy is that hypertension thrives in silence. Many Nigerians discover they are hypertensive only after suffering strokes, kidney complications or sudden collapse.

Nigeria’s declining quality of life is gradually becoming a public health emergency disguised as economic hardship. One of the cruellest realities of poverty is that it shortens life expectancy quietly. The wealthy monitor their blood pressure with digital devices, access preventive care and travel abroad for treatment, while the poor absorb years of unmanaged stress without diagnosis or proper care. Inequality itself is now shaping health outcomes. The man living in a gated estate jogs in the morning and attends wellness clinics; the market trader battling inflation and insecurity often survives on poor nutrition, interrupted sleep and untreated pressure. In this sense, hypertension in Nigeria is not merely about lifestyle; it is deeply tied to inequality, governance and the economics of survival.

Government officials continue to speak optimistically about reforms and long-term recovery. International financial institutions project moderate economic growth figures. But growth statistics mean little to citizens whose bodies are carrying the invisible burden of those adjustments. A nation cannot celebrate macroeconomic recovery while its people suffer emotional exhaustion. Economic policies that fail to cushion citizens psychologically eventually create medical consequences. This is why conversations around hypertension in Nigeria cannot remain confined to hospitals and awareness campaigns alone. They must also include wages, inflation, healthcare access, insecurity, mental wellbeing and social protection.

The emotional fatigue visible across Nigeria today should concern us deeply. We are becoming a nation of exhausted people smiling publicly while privately battling fear, uncertainty and silent despair. Many Nigerians no longer sleep properly because worries have become nocturnal companions. Families now discuss the prices of rice, fuel and medication with the same intensity previous generations reserved for national crises. Our blood pressure is rising alongside the cost of living. And the frightening thing about hypertension is that it accumulates quietly before suddenly appearing as stroke, heart attack, kidney failure or sudden death.

Nigeria is gradually becoming not merely an economic pressure cooker but a hypertension epicentre. This reality should alarm government, employers, religious institutions and policymakers alike. We need more than ceremonial awareness campaigns every May. We need affordable healthcare, stronger primary healthcare systems, local pharmaceutical manufacturing, safer highways and economic policies that reduce the crushing burden of daily survival. Above all, we need to stop normalising stress as though it were an unavoidable feature of Nigerian life. Because when an entire population lives under relentless pressure, hypertension ceases to be a private illness. It becomes a national emergency flowing silently through human veins. And perhaps the saddest Nigerian tension today is that millions are trying desperately to stay alive in a country where survival itself increasingly feels hazardous to health.

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