The 2026 Narrative Landscape
The 2026 agenda is shaped by two dominant forces: the rising burden of NCDs and the persistent threat of communicable disease — all against a backdrop of shrinking donor funding. Health journalism faces what one editor calls a "code red".
- A "double burden" of disease · Journalists report dual focus on rising NCDs (cancer, diabetes, hypertension, mental health) and persistent infectious diseases.
- Donor funding shifts dominate the immediate news cycle · Cuts threaten HIV and malaria programmes, pushing African countries toward domestic financing and local manufacturing.
- Misinformation is now the frontline · Facebook, X, TikTok, and AI-generated content turn journalists into verifiers of public-health information.
- Solutions and data-driven reporting rises · Reporting moves beyond problem-focus toward solutions journalism, spotlighting local innovations and community-led breakthroughs.
- African voices must lead African narratives · Journalists call for African researchers and practitioners to be cited as primary, authoritative sources.
The 2026 narrative landscape across African health media is shaped by two dominant forces — the escalating burden of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), and the persistent threat of communicable diseases — unfolding against a backdrop of shrinking external funding. The convergence has been described as a “code red for journalism”: the economic model for science reporting is eroding precisely when rigorous, trusted reporting is most needed to counter health misinformation.
“I think we’re really in a very dangerous situation, like a perfect storm, because on the one hand we have a more interconnected world and greater risk of the next pandemic. But at the same time we’ve got less money to look at it and we’re moving away from preparing for the future.”
— Ben Deighton, President, World Federation of Science Journalists; former editor, SciDev.Net
Africa’s pressing health priorities
A “double burden” of disease captures media attention
Journalists report a dual focus on rising non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and persistent infectious diseases. Coverage is increasingly dominated by NCDs and mental health, while endemic diseases such as Malaria and episodic outbreaks like Cholera and Mpox continue to command attention — in part because weakened surveillance systems struggle under budget pressures.
Donor-country funding shifts create urgency for self-reliance
Cuts threaten key programmes including HIV and malaria, pushing African countries toward domestic financing and local manufacturing of vaccines and medicines. The geopolitical story of donor retreat now dominates the immediate news cycle, displacing many of the disease-specific stories that had previously anchored health desks.
Digital health and AI offer new hope for access
Innovations like telemedicine, medical-delivery drones, and AI-powered diagnostics are seen as key drivers of progress, framed in coverage as engines for closing access gaps despite resource constraints.
Trends shaping health journalism
The new frontline: combating health misinformation
The spread of health disinformation on social media — Facebook, X, and TikTok especially — has turned journalists into frontline verifiers of public-health information. Combating disinformation, supercharged by AI-generated content, is now viewed as essential to safeguarding community health.
Storytelling evolves beyond problems to data and solutions
Reporting is shifting to data-driven journalism, multimedia formats (podcasts, video), and highlighting what’s working on the ground. Reporters are moving beyond problem-focused coverage toward solutions journalism, spotlighting local innovations and community-led breakthroughs. This shift is underpinned by increasing reliance on epidemiological and demographic datasets, maps, and visualisations to explain complex issues with precision.
A unified call to amplify African voices
Journalists urge funders to support local media and prioritise African experts as primary, authoritative sources to ensure that the continent’s health stories are told with authenticity, context, and rigour.
Collaboration, trust, and the importance of African voices
Access and transparency
Media professionals consistently request easier, quicker access to data, researchers, and project leaders. Bureaucracy — the obligation to submit official, written request letters and wait for institutional approvals — remains a major barrier. They emphasise the importance of clear, jargon-free communication and strongly discourage pre-publication approval attempts.
Capacity support
Given limited newsroom budgets, journalists highlight the need for training, grants, and fellowships to pursue long-form investigations and build expertise in specialised fields such as epidemiology, data analysis, and AI.
Elevating African expertise
Organisations are encouraged to prioritise African researchers, practitioners, and innovators as primary sources. Many local experts remain hesitant to speak to the media due to institutional constraints; the report recommends supporting local newsrooms, promoting regional reporting networks, and proactively amplifying African-led innovations to shift control of the narrative.