In a country of over 200 million people, hospital avoidance is not just a rural phenomenon. Across Lagos, Abuja, and Kano, you will meet educated Nigerians who still turn to self-medication or traditional healers before consulting a doctor. Why? The answer lies in a blend of distrust, poverty, and cultural heritage.

First, the cost barrier. Even public hospitals often demand deposits before treatment. With over 60% of Nigerians living below the poverty line, medical bills feel like punishments. When paracetamol can be bought at ₦200, why pay ₦20,000 for tests?

Cultural Influence
Herbal medicine remains powerful. Families pass recipes across generations. For many, bitter leaf soup is not just food, but medicine. Churches and mosques also promote faith-healing alternatives, reinforcing avoidance of hospitals.

Distrust in the System
Stories of misdiagnosis, lack of empathy, and absent doctors fuel skepticism. When people see nurses scrolling through phones while patients groan, trust erodes further. The perception: hospitals are where you go to die, not heal.

The Way Forward
1. Invest in primary healthcare so care is closer and cheaper.
2. Run campaigns showcasing positive hospital stories.
3. Improve staff training on empathy and communication.
4. Incentivize insurance adoption, making care prepaid and less frightening.

Final Thought
Nigeria’s healthcare transformation requires more than buildings and equipment. It requires winning hearts and building trust, one patient at a time.

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