Africa’s sporting landscape is a testament to raw talent and an indomitable spirit. From the high-altitude training camps of the Rift Valley to the urban football academies of West Africa, our youth are our greatest ambassadors. However, as the global spotlight on African talent intensifies, a silent crisis is unfolding in the shadows.
The Sports Wellness Summit (2nd Edition), themed “Echoes of Resilience: Forging Mental Wellness Pathways in African Sports,” is a high-level intervention designed to protect the “invisible load” carried by our athletes. We believe that the game is won in the mind before it is won on the field, and it is time the systems supporting the African athlete reflect this reality.
The Rationale: Why Mental Wellness?
While physical injuries are visible and treated with urgency, psychological distress in African sports remains largely untreated due to cultural stigma, low mental health literacy, and a severe shortage of specialized support.
Our research identifies four compounding pressures facing the African youth athlete:
Our Approach: Implementation Science
We are move beyond the “what” and into the “how.” This summit is not a traditional conference; it is an Implementation Accelerator.
Grounded in the Socio-Ecological Model of Health (Bronfenbrenner, 1979) and guided by Implementation Science principles (Damschroder et al., 2009), we focus on translating academic research into “on-the-pitch” reality. Our goal is to co-create Mental Health Action Blueprints practical, culturally
resonant toolkits that can be deployed immediately in schools, grassroots academies, and professional leagues across the continent.
The summit is curated by the Youth Initiative Development Programme (YIDP), a leader in youth-led development in Kenya. To ensure global standards and technical rigor, we have forged a strategic alliance with:
Triple I Foundation: Experts in athlete safeguarding and ethical governance.
ISSUP (International Society of Substance Use Professionals): Global leaders in evidence-based substance abuse prevention and treatment.
The Sports Wellness Summit (2nd Edition) is not a traditional conference of observation; it is a platform for collective action. By bringing together the expertise of YIDP, Triple I Foundation, ISSUP, and Zenith Health Global, we aim to move the needle on African sports health through the following five strategic goals:
We aim to dramatically increase mental health literacy across the African sporting ecosystem. By translating complex psychological concepts into culturally resonant, local languages, we will equip coaches, parents, and peers to recognize early distress signals and dismantle the stigma that forces athletes to suffer in silence.
We move beyond theory to produce the Mental Health Action Blueprints. These are practical, “on-the-pitch” toolkits designed for immediate deployment in 2,500+ schools, clubs and grassroots academies. These blueprints will provide step-by-step guidance on building psychological resilience, managing performance anxiety, and fostering athlete agency.
In partnership with ISSUP, we aim to implement robust substance abuse prevention frameworks. We will focus on shielding youth athletes from the infiltration of tobacco and recreational drugs, providing coaches with the tools to identify maladaptive coping mechanisms and offer healthy alternatives for stress management.
Our high-level policy dialogue aims to finalize the Implementation Framework. This landmark document will serve as a unified policy blueprint for sports federations and government bodies across Africa, ensuring that mental wellness and safeguarding are embedded into the legal and ethical DNA of sports governance.
Acknowledging the escalating environmental challenges in Africa, we aim to develop the continent’s first Climate-Resilient Sports Health Protocols. We will co-create strategies to manage the psychological and physiological toll of extreme heat and environmental stressors, ensuring our athletes remain healthy in a rapidly changing world.
We aim to address the “data void” in African sports health. Together, we will launch the Pan-African Sports Wellness Data Repository the continent’s first standardized database for youth athlete health. By collecting and synthesizing anonymized data on mental health prevalence, injury patterns, and substance use trends, we will provide the empirical evidence needed to drive targeted interventions and longitudinal research.
When we work together, we bridge the “translational gap” between research and reality. Your participation ensures that the “Echoes of Resilience” are heard in every locker room, school, and stadium across the continent.
Join the Alliance. Let’s forge the pathway together.
19-20 November 2026, Nairobi, Kenya