African Roots Health — Ancient Remedies. Documented Knowledge. Modern Lives.
African Roots Health

Your Grandmothers Knew.
It Was Just Never Written Down.

We document the ancient African remedies that healed for generations — researched, organised, and made available to every woman who needs them today.

Read The Ancient African Fibroid Secret
What we believe

The knowledge was always there.
It just stopped being passed down.

African women have managed their health naturally for generations. Not through guesswork. Through a body of practical knowledge — specific plants, specific combinations, specific dietary shifts — that existed long before scan machines, surgical theatres, and pharmaceutical prescriptions.

That knowledge was not disproven by modern medicine. It was simply not written down. It lived in compounds and kitchens. It passed between women through conversation and demonstration. And when the generation that carried it moved into hospitals and pharmacies, the knowledge did not follow them there.

At African Roots Health, we gather it back. We verify the mechanisms of each plant against current research. We organise the protocols into guides that any woman can follow — whether she is in Lagos, London, Houston, or Hamburg. And we make the knowledge available to every woman who needs it, before she accepts that the hospital's offer is the only offer on the table.

Ancient Knowledge

Every remedy we document has roots in African traditional practice spanning generations — not invented, recovered.

Verified Mechanisms

Each plant's active compounds are cross-referenced against peer-reviewed research. We explain why it works, not just that it works.

Honest About Limits

We tell you exactly when natural management is appropriate and when medical escalation is genuinely needed. The two are not opposites.

About African Roots Health

Built on one woman's refusal to accept surgery as the only option.

African Roots Health began with Adaeze — a 38-year-old woman from Surulere, Lagos, who was diagnosed with multiple fibroids and told that surgery was the only path forward. She had already spent close to ₦280,000 on hormonal therapy, Instagram herbal teas, and an unregulated herbalist before her mother's older sister visited from Enugu and sat with her for two hours, describing what women in their compound had always done.

What Aunty Ngozi shared that afternoon had no brand name and no WhatsApp seller. It was knowledge that had been passed between women for longer than any pharmacy had existed. Adaeze followed it for six weeks. At her next scan, the largest fibroid had reduced from 7.5cm to 3.8cm. Her doctor asked what she had done.

African Roots Health exists to make sure no woman has to hope her aunty visits from Enugu at the right moment. We gather this knowledge, verify it, organise it, and write it down — so it is available to every woman who needs it, wherever she is in the world.

"The knowledge was always there. Now it is written down."