IfeanHealth Nigeria has announced the launch of a new podcast series titled Beyond the Limb Podcast, with the first episode set to go live on April 10, 2026. In teaser posts shared on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram, the company describes the project as “a new kind of conversation,” promising “stories beyond the surface” and “perspectives that go deeper than what you see.”
At this stage, IfeanHealth has not publicly shared a detailed episode list or formal programme outline in the sources I found. What is clear is that the podcast is being framed as more than a standard product or company update stream. The language used in the teaser suggests a platform focused on lived experience, deeper reflection, and broader conversations around limb loss, rehabilitation, and disability-related realities in Nigeria and beyond. That reading is an inference from the teaser wording rather than a confirmed editorial brief.
For IMEA CPO readers, the significance lies in the format as much as the launch itself. Podcasts remain underused in the orthotics and prosthetics sector, especially in African markets, where most communication still comes through short-form social posts, clinic marketing, or event-based education. A dedicated podcast can create room for more detailed discussion, patient stories, clinician perspectives, caregiver experiences, and wider conversations about access, identity, mobility, and life beyond the technical side of prosthetic provision. This is an inference, but it aligns with the title Beyond the Limb and the “stories beyond the surface” positioning used by IfeanHealth.
The launch also fits with IfeanHealth’s wider public-facing content strategy. The company has recently published educational and awareness-led posts around prosthetic solutions in Nigeria, upper- and lower-limb care, and caregiver support, suggesting that the new podcast may sit within a broader effort to build more sustained public conversation around prosthetics, orthotics, and rehabilitation.
IfeanHealth’s teaser names Lagos, Nigeria as the location attached to the announcement, and the company’s LinkedIn page presents the initiative through its corporate channel rather than through a separate personal brand or external media platform. That may help the podcast gain traction among patients, clinicians, caregivers, and rehabilitation stakeholders already familiar with the company’s work.
Until more details are released, the strongest takeaway is that Beyond the Limb Podcast appears intended to widen the conversation around limb loss and rehabilitation rather than keep it limited to devices alone. If it delivers on that promise, it could become a useful new media platform in Nigeria’s prosthetics and rehabilitation space.










