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ALEXX EKUBO : A SILENT HEALTH CRISIS MANY NIGERIANS IGNORE

May 13, 2026 • Dons Eze • 2 min read

ALEXX EKUBO : A SILENT HEALTH CRISIS MANY NIGERIANS IGNORE

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The reported shocking and tragic death of popular Nollywood actor Alexx Ekubo at just 40 years old has sent shockwaves across Nigeria and beyond, with reports suggesting the actor had been privately battling cancer before his passing.

While some reports mention liver cancer and others suggest kidney cancer, one painful reality remains clear:
Many deadly diseases destroy the body silently long before symptoms become obvious.

For many Nigerians, this tragedy is becoming more than celebrity news. It is now a wake up call.

Across social media, thousands of people have started discussing a growing health crisis affecting younger Nigerians: Late diagnosis.

Too many people still avoid routine medical checkups until serious symptoms appear:
Yellow eyes.
Swollen stomach.
Severe weakness.
Vomiting blood.
Rapid weight loss.

By then, treatment becomes harder, more expensive and sometimes too late.

Medical experts have repeatedly warned that liver diseases especially Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C remain major risk factors for liver cancer in Nigeria. These infections can quietly damage the liver for years without obvious symptoms.

Other major risk factors include:

  • Excessive alcohol use
  • Smoking
  • Obesity and fatty liver disease
  • Unsafe sex
  • Self medication and drug abuse
  • Unsafe herbal mixtures
  • Poorly stored foods contaminated with toxins
  • Lack of routine medical screening

Health professionals also warn that many Nigerians normalize dangerous habits because “nothing seems wrong” at the moment.

But liver damage is often silent in its early stages.

One of the biggest conversations sparked by the actor’s death is how many young Africans appear healthy publicly while secretly battling severe illnesses privately.

Several online users also pointed to deeper systemic problems:
Poor healthcare access,
expensive treatment,
fake drugs,
weak preventive healthcare culture,
and widespread dependence on self medication.

The incident has once again highlighted the urgent need for:

  • Regular medical checkups
  • Hepatitis testing and vaccination
  • Better health awareness
  • Reduced alcohol and drug abuse
  • Earlier hospital visits before complications develop

Because sometimes, the body whispers for years before it screams.

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Dons Eze

DONS EZE, PhD, Political Philosopher and Journalist of over four decades standing, worked in several newspaper houses across the country, and rose to the positions of Editor and General Manager. A UNESCO Fellow in Journalism, Dr. Dons Eze, a prolific writer and author of many books, attended several courses on Journalism and Communication in both Nigeria and overseas, including a Postgraduate Course on Journalism at Warsaw, Poland; Strategic Communication and Practical Communication Approach at RIPA International, London, the United Kingdom, among others.

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