Being diagnosed with diabetes in Nigeria is more challenging than it sounds. Medications are expensive, quality nutritional advice for local foods is hard to find, clinic appointments are crowded, and there's still significant social stigma around chronic illness. But with the right knowledge and tools, diabetes can be managed well — and life can remain full and active.
This guide covers everything: what diabetes is, how medications work, what to eat as a Nigerian diabetic, how to monitor your blood sugar, and the warning signs that mean you need urgent medical attention.
What is type 2 diabetes?
Type 2 diabetes is a condition where your body either doesn't produce enough insulin or doesn't use insulin effectively. Insulin is a hormone made by your pancreas that allows glucose (sugar) from food to enter your cells for energy. Without it working properly, glucose builds up in your bloodstream — causing the high blood sugar levels that damage organs over time.
Unlike type 1 diabetes (which is autoimmune and usually appears in childhood), type 2 diabetes is heavily influenced by lifestyle — though genetics also plays a significant role. In Nigeria, type 2 diabetes accounts for over 90% of all diabetes cases.
Diet: the most powerful tool you have
No medication works as well as a consistently good diet for controlling type 2 diabetes. The goal isn't to never eat carbohydrates — it's to choose the right carbohydrates, eat smaller portions, and pair them with protein and vegetables that slow down glucose absorption.
Nigerian foods to limit or avoid
⚠️ Limit or Avoid
- White rice (large portions)
- Eba, pounded yam, fufu, amala
- White bread, agege bread
- Sugary drinks (Malt, Fanta, Coke, energy drinks)
- Ripe plantain (fried or boiled)
- Garri soaked with sugar and milk
- Chin-chin, puff-puff, buns
- Canned tomato paste (high sugar)
✅ Eat More Of
- Ofada rice (local brown rice)
- Beans, lentils, cowpea (wake)
- Vegetables: ugu, ewedu, spinach, okra
- Fish (catfish, tilapia, mackerel)
- Chicken or turkey (no skin)
- Boiled unripe plantain (in moderation)
- Eggs
- Unsweetened zobo, water, coconut water
Practical meal strategies
- Plate method: Half your plate should be vegetables, one quarter lean protein, one quarter starchy carbohydrate.
- Portion control: A fist-sized portion of eba or rice is the maximum for one meal. Most Nigerians eat 3–4x this amount.
- Eat more slowly: It takes 20 minutes for your brain to register fullness. Eating fast leads to overeating.
- Pair carbs with fibre and protein: Beans with rice raises blood sugar far more slowly than rice alone.
- Breakfast matters: Don't skip breakfast — eating nothing leads to overeating and blood sugar spikes later.
- Choose bitter leaf soups: Bitter leaf (onugbu), ewedu, and oha are lower-glycaemic soup bases than plain starchy soups.
Key insight: Eba (garri) actually has a moderate glycaemic index when eaten with a thick egusi or vegetable soup, because the fat and fibre in the soup slow glucose absorption. The problem is the quantity — not the food itself.
Medications used for diabetes in Nigeria
Your doctor will recommend medication based on your blood sugar levels, kidney function, weight, and other health conditions. Here are the most commonly prescribed diabetes medications in Nigeria:
| Medication | How It Works | Common Side Effects | Approx. Cost (Monthly) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metformin | Reduces glucose production in the liver; improves insulin sensitivity | Nausea, diarrhoea (usually improves), take with food | ₦500–₦3,000 |
| Glibenclamide (Glyburide) | Stimulates pancreas to produce more insulin | Hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar), weight gain | ₦1,000–₦4,000 |
| Glimepiride | Same class as Glibenclamide, longer-acting | Hypoglycaemia (lower risk than Glibenclamide) | ₦2,000–₦6,000 |
| Insulin (various types) | Directly replaces or supplements body's insulin | Hypoglycaemia, injection site reactions, weight gain | ₦5,000–₦25,000+ |
Metformin: Nigeria's first-line medication
Metformin is almost always the first medication prescribed for type 2 diabetes in Nigeria — and for good reason. It's safe, highly effective, inexpensive in generic form, and doesn't cause hypoglycaemia on its own. It also has some evidence for modest weight loss, which is helpful since excess weight worsens diabetes.
The most common complaint is stomach discomfort (nausea, loose stools) in the first few weeks. This usually passes. Always take Metformin with food to reduce this.
Important: Never stop your diabetes medication without speaking to your doctor, even if you feel fine or your blood sugar looks normal. Diabetes is a chronic condition — your numbers look good because the medication is working.
Monitoring your blood sugar at home
Home monitoring is one of the most powerful things a diabetic Nigerian can do. It tells you how specific foods, exercise, stress, and medications are affecting your blood sugar in real time — and allows you to adjust before problems develop.
When to test
- Fasting: First thing in the morning before eating or drinking. Target: 80–130 mg/dL.
- After meals: 2 hours after the start of a meal. Target: below 180 mg/dL.
- Before bed: Especially if on insulin. Target: 100–140 mg/dL.
- When you feel unwell: Illness raises blood sugar. Check more frequently when sick.
Reading your results
Keep a log — either in a notebook or using the AFYA app. Your doctor needs to see trends, not just individual readings. A single high reading means less than a pattern of consistently elevated morning blood sugars.
Exercise: more powerful than most medications
Physical activity lowers blood sugar directly by making your muscles absorb glucose even without insulin. A 30-minute walk after a meal can reduce your post-meal blood sugar by 30–50 mg/dL. Regular exercise also improves insulin sensitivity over weeks and months.
You don't need a gym. Brisk walking is effective. Aim for at least 30 minutes of walking 5 days per week. If you're just starting, begin with 10–15 minutes and increase gradually.
If you take insulin or Glibenclamide: Exercise can cause hypoglycaemia. Carry a small snack (biscuit, sachet of glucose, or sweets) when exercising. Check your blood sugar before and after exercising until you know how your body responds.
Medication adherence: the most common problem
In Nigerian clinics, the most common reason for poor diabetes control isn't the wrong medication — it's missed doses. Studies in Nigeria show that 40–60% of diabetic patients have poor medication adherence, often because of:
- Forgetting, especially when busy
- Cost of medications (running out before the next clinic visit)
- Side effects that go unaddressed
- Feeling "fine" and deciding not to take medication
- Traditional or religious beliefs about chronic medication
Setting a daily alarm on your phone, using a pill organiser, or linking medication to a daily habit (like breakfast) significantly improves adherence. Apps like AFYA can send you daily reminders and track your streak.
Diabetes complications to watch for
Long-term uncontrolled diabetes damages blood vessels and nerves throughout the body. The most common complications in Nigeria include:
- Diabetic neuropathy: Tingling, numbness, or burning pain in the feet and hands. Very common in Nigeria due to years of undiagnosed diabetes.
- Diabetic foot: Small wounds on the foot that don't heal and become infected. Nigeria has a high rate of diabetic amputations — mostly preventable with good glucose control and daily foot inspection.
- Kidney damage (nephropathy): Diabetes is a leading cause of kidney failure in Nigeria. Annual urine and blood tests are essential.
- Eye damage (retinopathy): Can lead to blindness. Annual eye checks (especially retinal screening) are recommended.
- Cardiovascular disease: Diabetics have 2–4× the risk of heart attack and stroke.
Daily foot care for diabetic Nigerians
Inspect your feet every evening. Look for cuts, cracks, blisters, redness, or swelling. Never walk barefoot — even indoors. Wash feet daily in lukewarm (not hot) water. If you notice any wound that isn't healing after 2–3 days, see a doctor immediately.
When to see a doctor urgently
- Blood sugar above 300 mg/dL (16.7 mmol/L) with nausea or vomiting
- Blood sugar below 70 mg/dL (3.9 mmol/L) that doesn't improve after eating sugar
- Fruity smell on your breath (sign of diabetic ketoacidosis — rare in Type 2 but serious)
- Chest pain or shortness of breath
- Any foot wound or infection
- Sudden vision changes or blurring
- Confusion, drowsiness, or loss of consciousness
Frequently asked questions
Can I drink palm wine if I have diabetes?
Palm wine contains natural sugars and alcohol, both of which affect blood sugar. Small amounts (one small cup with food) are generally tolerated by well-controlled diabetics, but larger amounts are risky. Fermented palm wine has less sugar than fresh. Alcohol also masks hypoglycaemia symptoms — so if you drink, always eat first.
I can't afford test strips every day. What should I do?
Test strategically rather than skipping entirely. Test fasting every day and post-meal 2–3 times per week. At minimum, test whenever you feel unwell, before driving long distances, or when changing medications. Talk to your doctor about which tests matter most for your situation.
Is there a cure for diabetes in traditional medicine?
No traditional preparation has been proven to cure or replace diabetes medication in rigorous clinical trials. Some plants (bitter leaf, neem, moringa) have mild glucose-lowering effects in animal studies, but these effects are small and unpredictable. Using herbs as a replacement for prescribed medication is dangerous and has led to many complications in Nigeria.
Never miss a Metformin dose again
AFYA sends daily medication reminders, tracks your adherence streak, and lets you log vitals — all free.
Start using AFYA →The bottom line
Managing diabetes in Nigeria requires consistent effort — but it's absolutely achievable. The three most impactful things you can do are: take your medication every day without missing doses, eat smaller portions of carbohydrates paired with more vegetables and protein, and walk for 30 minutes daily. These three habits, done consistently, will improve your blood sugar more than any supplement or traditional remedy.
Work with your doctor, monitor your numbers, and use available technology to stay on track. Complications from diabetes are largely preventable — but only when the condition is actively managed.
⚕️ Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before changing your diabetes management plan, medications, or diet.