29 Women Leaders Set to Transform Nigeria's Health
Elijah TobsBy Elijah Tobs
Health
May 7, 2026 • 8:31 PM
4m4 min read
Source: Pexels
The Core Insight
29 mid-career women in Nigeria's health sector graduated from the 2025 Nigeria Leadership Journey, a year-long program by WomenLift Health and WILAN. It addresses the leadership gender gap amid high maternal deaths, featuring training, mentorship, and networking. Officials highlighted inclusive leadership's role in better outcomes, with plans to expand to midwifery in 2026.
As the founder and primary investigative voice at Kodawire, Elijah Tobs brings over 15 years of experience in dissecting complex geopolitical and financial systems. His work is centered on the ethical governance of emerging technologies, the shifting architectures of global finance, and the future of pedagogy in a digital-first world. A staunch advocate for high-fidelity journalism, he established Kodawire to be a sanctuary for deep-dive intelligence. Moving away from the ephemeral nature of modern headlines, Kodawire delivers permanent, verified insights that challenge the status quo and empower the global reader.
29 Women Complete Leadership Programme to Strengthen Nigeria’s Health Sector
29 women leaders mark completion of Nigeria Leadership Journey in Abuja. (Credit: unique bash Creative via Pexels)
Twenty-nine women leaders across Nigeria’s health sector have completed the 2025 Nigeria Leadership Journey, a year-long leadership development programme that strengthens women’s influence and impact within the country’s healthcare system.
The initiative, delivered through a partnership between WomenLift Health and Women in Leadership Advancement Network (WILAN), concluded with a two-day in-person “Lift-Off” event in Abuja. The gathering brought together stakeholders from government, development organisations, and the broader health ecosystem to mark the participants’ transition into a new phase of leadership.
For mid-career professionals already working within Nigeria’s health system, the programme focuses on deepening leadership capacity, strengthening participants’ voices, and expanding their professional networks to improve decision-making and health outcomes.
Women leaders building capacity in Nigeria's health workforce. (Credit: Joseph Oti Nyametease via Pexels)
Although women make up a significant proportion of Nigeria’s health workforce, particularly in frontline roles, leadership positions remain disproportionately held by men. This gap is especially critical in a country that accounts for nearly 20% of global maternal deaths, underscoring the urgent need for more inclusive and representative leadership to improve maternal and broader health outcomes. The programme directly addresses this by building a pipeline of women leaders equipped to influence health systems at scale. (WHO Maternal Mortality Factsheet)
“Nigeria’s health system cannot reach its full potential without inclusive and representative leadership. When women lead, maternal mortality becomes more than a statistic. It becomes a mission. When women lead, primary healthcare is not just infrastructure. It becomes a lifeline. And when women lead, communities do not just receive services. They receive dignity.”
Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Muhammad Ali Pate, represented by Permanent Secretary Daju Kachollom. ThisDayLive (2025)
Over the 12-month period, participants engaged in a mix of in-person residencies, virtual learning sessions, mentorship, coaching, and leadership projects. The programme also prioritised systems thinking, influence-building, and peer support as critical components of effective leadership.
“Across countries, we see the same pattern: women are central to healthcare delivery but underrepresented in leadership. This partnership reflects a shared conviction that the future of health in Nigeria and across Africa will be shaped by women leaders who are supported to step fully into their influence.”
Following the success of the 2025 cohort, both organisations plan to expand the Leadership Journey in 2026, with a focus on midwifery leadership, recognising the vital role of frontline health workers in improving maternal and newborn outcomes. (Related health insurance advances)
“This is about amplifying the impact of women who are already shaping the system. We are building a pipeline of confident, connected leaders who are ready to drive change where it matters most.”
Abosede George-Ogan, Founder and Executive Director of WILAN. ThisDayLive (2025)
The organisers say the initiative reflects a broader shift towards leadership models that combine technical expertise with influence, collaboration, and sustained support networks to drive systemic change in healthcare.
Participants expanding networks for health system influence. (Credit: Yan Krukau via Pexels)
Twenty-nine women leaders across Nigeria’s health sector completed the programme.
The programme was delivered through a partnership between WomenLift Health and Women in Leadership Advancement Network (WILAN).
The 2026 expansion will focus on midwifery leadership to improve maternal and newborn outcomes.
Nigeria accounts for nearly 20% of global maternal deaths, and women are underrepresented in leadership despite being a significant part of the health workforce.
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Editorial Team • Question of the Day
"How can empowering women leaders transform Nigeria's health challenges?"