Lagos To Build Largest Cancer Centre In Africa

Lagos State government has announced plans to construct the largest cancer diagnostic and treatment facility in Nigeria, named Lagos State Comprehensive Cancer Diagnostic Center, in Alausa, Ikeja.

Gatekeepers News reports that Commissioner for Health, Akin Abayomi made the announcement during 2025 Annual Ministerial Press Briefing organized by the Ministry of Information and Strategy at the Bagauda Kaltho Press Centre.

Abayomi described the project as a key part of the State’s healthcare transformation agenda, aimed at significantly improving cancer detection and treatment while reducing medical tourism and promoting local access to world-class care.

He noted that the State has taken major strides to curb the brain drain of health professionals by recruiting over 7,000 doctors, providing modern residential quarters, and investing in the training and retention of healthcare workers.

He said, “Nigeria currently requires approximately 300,000 doctors to meet optimal healthcare demands.”

“Lagos alone, with a population exceeding 20 million, needs an additional 33,000 doctors to align with the World Health Organization’s recommended doctor-to-patient ratio of 1:600.”

As part of Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s commitment to making Lagos a regional hub for health tourism, the Commissioner highlighted several high-profile health infrastructure projects nearing completion, including; The 150-bed New Massey Children’s Hospital on Lagos Island, A General Hospital in Ojo, A 1,500-bed Psychiatric and Rehabilitation Hospital in Ketu-Ejirin
All three projects are currently at 70 percent completion and are expected to be inaugurated by April 2026.

The Commissioner added that a Smart Health Information Platform (SHIP) — a digital health tool that will facilitate real-time data management and evidence-based decision-making has being deployed across health facilities in the state.

He noted that Lagos is also preparing to launch Lagos State Medical Industry and Innovation Zone (LASMIZO), a public-private partnership designed to drive medical research, local manufacturing, and health sector innovation.

Special Adviser to the Governor on Health, Kemi Ogunyemi, disclosed that the recent diphtheria outbreak in the state has been successfully contained through aggressive immunization efforts.

She reaffirmed the government’s commitment to reducing maternal mortality, scaling up malaria prevention, and enhancing awareness and management of tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and other communicable diseases.