Before sunrise in northern Cameroon, patients are already waiting outside Dr. Paulette Djeugoue’s diabetes clinic, some having spent the night on wooden benches for the chance to be seen. The scene captures a growing public health emergency across Africa: diabetes, long overshadowed by infectious diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and H.I.V., is becoming a major cause of illness and death, even as many patients remain undiagnosed or untreated.
The problem is not only that diabetes is rising. It is that health systems in many parts of the continent were built to confront outbreaks and acute infections, not lifelong chronic diseases that require regular testing, medicines, nutrition counseling and follow-up care. In places where specialists are scarce and clinics are far away, people often arrive for treatment only after severe complications have begun.
A Shift in Africa’s Disease Burden
For decades, global health efforts in Africa focused heavily on communicable diseases, and with reason: they killed millions and demanded urgent intervention. But as populations grow, urban diets change, life expectancy improves and lifestyles become more sedentary in some regions, noncommunicable diseases have steadily gained ground. Diabetes is now part of that transition, creating a double burden for countries still fighting infections while trying to manage hypertension, cancer and heart disease.
This shift is especially challenging because diabetes is often less visible in its early stages. A person can live with dangerously high blood sugar for years without knowing it. By the time symptoms become impossible to ignore, they may already face nerve damage, kidney disease, vision loss or foot ulcers that can lead to amputation. In under-resourced health systems, prevention and early detection are frequently the first things to fall through the cracks.
The Emerging Threat of Malnutrition-Linked Diabetes
The source material points to another alarming development: the appearance of a form of diabetes associated with malnutrition. Though diabetes is often associated globally with obesity and excess calorie intake, the disease is more complex than that. In poorer regions, undernutrition early in life or prolonged nutritional deprivation may affect the pancreas and the body’s ability to regulate blood sugar, producing cases that do not fit the familiar stereotypes of either Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes.
That matters because diagnosis guides treatment. If health workers are trained only to recognize conventional patterns, some patients may be misclassified and receive care that is incomplete or poorly matched to their condition. In places where even standard diabetes screening is hard to access, atypical forms of the disease can go unnoticed for even longer.
Why Access to Care Is So Unequal
Managing diabetes depends on continuity: blood tests, glucose monitoring, medication, reliable food access and patient education. Yet many families in low-income communities cannot afford transport to clinics, let alone recurring medical costs. Insulin and other essential medicines may be unavailable, too expensive or inconsistently stocked. When people must choose between daily survival and long-term disease management, treatment is interrupted and complications multiply.
Shortages of trained specialists deepen the problem. A single doctor serving a large region cannot meet the scale of need, and primary care systems are often not equipped to absorb the demand. The result is a cycle of late diagnosis, emergency treatment and preventable disability.
Why This Story Matters Beyond One Clinic
This is not only an African health story. It is a warning about what happens when chronic illness expands faster than health systems can adapt. The global conversation about diabetes often centers on wealthy and middle-income societies, but Africa’s experience shows how the disease intersects with poverty, food insecurity and fragile infrastructure in distinct ways.
For readers, the significance is clear: diabetes is no longer a disease that can be treated as a secondary concern in developing regions. It affects workforce productivity, household finances, school attendance and national health budgets. It also exposes a broader truth about global medicine: diseases do not remain neatly divided between “rich-world” and “poor-world” categories.
If governments and international donors fail to invest in screening, affordable medicines, nutrition support and frontline care, the consequences will extend far beyond individual patients waiting on those benches in Cameroon. The rise of diabetes in Africa signals a public health transition that is already underway, whether the world is prepared for it or not.







