Abstract
Existing medical literature is dominated by descriptions of Africa as a mere consumer of Euro-West medical practices without acknowledging Africa's role in medical innovation and practices. This article closes this gap which has practical implications. The aim of the article is to describe the rise of medical practices in Africa from ancient times to the present. The article utilises an historical analysis of literature available in both grey and academic literature. The sources used include books, reports, and biographies and were identified using terms such as Africa agency, African medicine, ancient technologies in Africa, and diseases in Africa as key terms. The articles were selected from the Web of Science and Google Scholar databases for standardisation purposes. The article shows that before the Europeans invaded Africa, more advanced medicine and medical practices such as disease treatment, immunisation through inoculation, and quarantine of the infected and exposed already existed on the continent while immunisation was only known after 1721. Africans used a variety of plants with salicylic acid for pain, kaolin for diarrhoea, and also extracts that Euro-West researchers discovered only in the 20 th century to kill Gram positive bacteria. The article concludes that Africans have, therefore, never played a passive, but rather a leading role in the field of innovation and medicine.