Experts say Nigeria eyes aging crisis as elderly care lags

Nigeria is aging fast, but care, training, and respect for older people are lagging badly, and a room full of experts just said the quiet part out loud.

Why the concern surfaced now
  • Stakeholders from medicine, academia, and traditional leadership gathered to talk about aging.
  • The mood was less academic theory and more, we are unprepared, full stop.
  • Absence of structured geriatric care was treated as a national blind spot.
Where the conversation happened
  • The discussion took place in Ibadan.
  • The event was organized by the University of Third Age Nigeria.
  • The theme focused on making gerontology a real academic discipline in Africa.
Who showed up and why it mattered
  • Lekan Alabi attended as a traditional voice.
  • Academic weight came from Francois Vellas and Sidicd Camara.
  • Leadership presence was anchored by Afolabi Israel.
The healthcare reality check
  • Dr. Olamiji Ajanaku painted a blunt picture of neglect.
  • Geriatric centers were described as too few for Nigeria’s aging population.
  • Facilities, training, and institutional focus were all flagged as missing.
How older people are being framed
  • Elders were described as ignored after years of contribution.
  • Youth attitudes were called out as dismissive and short-sighted.
  • Older citizens were framed as living libraries, not expired relevance.
The academic gap is being called out
  • Gerontology and geriatric care were said to be largely absent from curricula.
  • Teaching aging-related care was framed as just as essential as Nursing or Medicine.
  • Lack of trained caregivers was tied directly to the elderly suffering.
A psychological perspective
  • Oluwafemi Esan pushed back on the idea that age equals irrelevance.
  • Older people were described as custodians of historical knowledge.
  • Losing access to that wisdom was framed as a social loss, not just personal.
What stakeholders want next
  • Gerontology is to be introduced as a distinct course of study.
  • Formal training pathways for geriatric care professionals.
  • A mindset shift that treats aging as a phase deserving structure and dignity.
The underlying message
  • Nigeria is aging whether policy catches up or not.
  • Ignoring older people was framed as both a moral and a practical failure.
  • Education was positioned as the fastest lever to change outcomes.
 

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