Leadership Challenges in Implementing AI Governance Frameworks in Sub-Saharan African Healthcare Systems: A Conceptual Analysis

by Ashley Timean, Oluchi Jane Maduka

Published: November 16, 2025 • DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2025.910000462

Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming healthcare delivery worldwide, offering diagnostic precision and operational efficiency. However, in Sub-Saharan Africa, the implementation of AI systems outpaces the development of ethical and institutional safeguards. This conceptual paper examines how leadership styles, ethical orientations, and institutional cultures influence the success or failure of AI governance frameworks in the region’s healthcare systems. Drawing on transformational, servant, and ethical leadership theories, as well as responsible-innovation principles, the paper synthesizes global and African literature, including WHO’s Trustworthy AI guidelines and the African Union’s digital health strategy on AI governance, health policy gaps, and organizational culture. It argues that effective AI governance depends less on technology than on leadership capacity to integrate moral vision, accountability, and inclusion. The paper concludes by proposing a leadership-centered conceptual model encompassing ethical leadership traits, institutional alignment, and policy coherence, and policy recommendations for strengthening ethical AI adoption across Sub-Saharan Africa.