We treated 241 patients at Safe City in March, passing 7,400 total

Posted 1 May 2026
In March, 241 community members received free healthcare at Safe City in Oworoshoki, Lagos, bringing the clinic's total since launch to 7,497 patients. Numbers dipped from February's 303 because Safe City recently went through a staff change. We think some patients are still adjusting to the new team, while ongoing home demolitions in Oworoshoki continued to displace residents through the month. Healthcare is built on trust, and trust takes time, especially when a familiar face changes.
Despite the dip, 62% of March's patients were returning, the highest returning rate of either of our two clinics this month, which suggests families who've come once keep coming back. Children under 18 made up 34% of visits, 80 kids whose parents had nowhere else to take them, and 73% of patients overall were women, most supporting families on around $7.81 per person per month, well below the global poverty line. One patient travelled 12.1 km from Mushin to reach us, nearly two hours each way. Malaria was the most common condition we treated (30%), followed by muscle and body pain (17%), upper respiratory infections (7%), and high blood pressure (3%). We spent about £296 (US$375) on medications, supplies, and operations.
Mrs Emini, a Safe City patient, shared her experience on video, describing what free care has meant to her.
We expect numbers to bounce back next month as the new team settles in and the community grows comfortable with them.