Why Nigeria has declared skin lightening a health emergency
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, is a prime market for a cosmetics industry centred around skin lightening. In February of this year Moji Adeyeye, director general of Nigeria’s National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, declared the practice “a national health emergency.”1 The dangers of skin lightening include diabetes, hypertension, neuropathy, and hepatic or renal toxicity.2 And cosmetics aren’t the only products to contend with.In neighbouring Ghana, the Food and Drugs Authority was compelled to issue a public warning over what it described as “the use of skin lightening agents in the form of pills and tablets being used by consumers including pregnant women with the erroneous impression that it would lighten the skin of their unborn babies.”3 For many parents, lighter skin simply translates to improved social and economic prospects for their offspring.Skin lightening, as the name implies, is the process of making one’s skin colour lighter,…
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