If you are currently pregnant and in pain — back pain, headaches, pelvic pressure, leg cramps, any of it — I need you to read this before you reach for any tablet. What you are about to learn could be the most important thing you read this entire pregnancy.

Because some of the most commonly purchased painkillers in every Nigerian pharmacy, every open-air market, and every patent medicine store in this country are completely forbidden after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

And most women buying them have absolutely no idea.

My name is Chisom. I am 31 years old, from Enugu, and during my first pregnancy I took Ibuprofen regularly from about week 14 to week 22. Not because I was reckless. Not because I did not love my baby. But because nobody — not the pharmacy man, not my ANC nurse, not a single person I asked — told me clearly that Ibuprofen after 20 weeks of pregnancy can permanently close a critical blood vessel in your baby's heart and cause irreversible kidney damage.

I found out later. When it was already done. That fear still sits with me.

The Pain Was Running My Life

When I fell pregnant with my second child, the pain started at week eight and never really stopped. Lower back pain that woke me at 3am. Tension headaches so bad I could not cook or take care of my toddler. By week sixteen I had added pelvic pain so severe that walking from my kitchen to my bedroom felt like punishment.

The truth nobody told me: Ibuprofen and Diclofenac (Voltaren, Cataflam) are sold freely at every pharmacy and market in Nigeria — but after 20 weeks of pregnancy, these drugs block a substance called prostaglandin that keeps a critical foetal blood vessel (the ductus arteriosus) open. When that vessel closes prematurely, it forces blood into the baby's lungs before they are ready, causing permanent lung damage. These drugs also suppress foetal kidney function, leading to dangerously low amniotic fluid. This is not a theoretical risk. It is clinically documented.

❌ Everything I Tried Before That Did Not Work
Ibuprofen and Diclofenac from the pharmacy — gave temporary relief. Were silently putting my baby at risk. The pharmacist said nothing.
Bitter leaf (Vernonia amygdalina) tea every morning — contains uterotonic compounds that stimulate uterine contractions. Not something you want during pregnancy.
Scent leaf (efirin) decoctions for headaches — also shows uterotonic properties in studies.
A ₦15,000 “pregnancy massage oil” from Instagram — arrived smelling of pepper, caused skin irritation, did nothing for the pain.
Resting flat on my back for hours — nobody told me that from the second trimester, lying flat compresses a major blood vessel and reduces blood flow to your baby.

Then I Met Mama Ngozi at a Baby Shower in Awka

She introduced herself simply: “I am Mama Ngozi. I spent thirty-one years delivering babies for the government in Anambra State.”

She was 68. Retired six years. She had delivered over four thousand babies across three government hospitals.

“My daughter, the problem is not that you are in too much pain. The problem is that nobody has taught you how your own body works during pregnancy. Once you understand that — once the fear leaves — the pain becomes manageable.” — Mama Ngozi, Retired Government Midwife, 68, Awka

For the next two hours, Mama Ngozi explained why specific Nigerian drugs are dangerous at specific stages of pregnancy. She walked me through which traditional remedies are genuinely safe and which ones contain compounds that trigger premature contractions.

What Happened When I Actually Followed Her Guidance

By Day 4, the overnight back pain had reduced by more than half. By the end of week two, my headaches had dropped from near-daily to twice a week.

“Chisom, you look like yourself again. Your face has relaxed. You are not wincing every time you stand up. What changed?” — Emeka, my husband, four weeks after I started following Mama Ngozi's guidance

I spent the next two months working with Mama Ngozi, verifying every drug safety claim against the obstetric pharmacology guidelines used in Nigerian medical schools. Then I wrote it all down — into one complete, evidence-checked, 46-page guide that any pregnant Nigerian woman can use.

10
Complete Chapters
46
Pages of Guidance
11
Nigerian Remedies Reviewed
13
Emergency Warning Signs
Introducing the Guide
The Pregnant Woman's
Pain-Free Guide
Instant Digital Download — PDF

A 46-page, evidence-checked pain management guide written specifically for pregnant women in Nigeria. Covers every trimester, every common pain type, drug safety by name, traditional remedy verdicts, emergency warning signs, sickle cell disease, malaria, and labour — in plain language.

The Nigerian Herbal Remedy Verdicts

RemedyCommon UseVerdict
Fresh ginger teaNausea, morning sickness✅ Generally Safe
Shea butter (topical)Stretch marks✅ Generally Safe
Clove oil on tooth (topical)Toothache✅ Safe Topically
Zobo / Hibiscus teaDrink, blood pressure⚠ Avoid 1st Trimester
Uziza leafLabour stimulation⚠ Avoid During Pregnancy
Bitter leaf (Vernonia amygdalina)Fever, pain, tonic❌ Avoid — Uterotonic Compounds
Scent leaf / efirinHeadache, fever❌ Avoid Concentrated Use
FenugreekMilk production❌ Avoid in Pregnancy
Palm wineCultural use🚫 DANGEROUS — Contains Alcohol

Drug Safety Preview

Medication1st Trim.2nd Trim.3rd Trim.Key Risk
Paracetamol (Emzor, Panadol)✓ Caution✓ Preferred✓ PreferredSafest available analgesic; lowest effective dose only
Ibuprofen (Advil, Brufen)⚠ Avoid⚠ Rx only✗✗ FORBIDDENCloses foetal ductus arteriosus; kidney damage after 20 wks
Diclofenac (Voltaren, Cataflam)⚠ Avoid⚠ Rx only✗✗ FORBIDDENIdentical risks to Ibuprofen; sold without pregnancy warnings
Codeine✗ Avoid✗ Avoid✗✗ FORBIDDENNeonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome at birth
Tramadol✗ Avoid✗ Avoid✗✗ FORBIDDENSame opioid risks as Codeine; widely misused in Nigeria
Tetracycline antibioticsNEVERNEVERNEVERPermanently stains baby's teeth; damages developing bones
Iron + Folic Acid✓ Essential✓ Essential✓ EssentialFree at all government ANC clinics; critical for safe delivery

What Other Nigerian Women Are Saying

“I was in my second trimester and taking Diclofenac almost every week for back pain. When I read the drug safety section in this guide, I nearly fainted — I had no idea what I was doing to my baby. I immediately stopped and started the non-drug methods. Within two weeks my back pain was manageable without a single tablet.”
👩🏾
Adaeze M., 28
Onitsha, Anambra State
★★★★★
“I have SS genotype and I was terrified going into my pregnancy. Nobody — not even my specialist — explained the SCD section to me this clearly. The dehydration protocol alone changed how I managed my second trimester.”
👩🏿
Fatima A., 33
Kano State
★★★★★
“I had been drinking bitter leaf water every day because my mother-in-law said it was good for pregnancy. When I read the herb verdicts and saw that bitter leaf contains uterotonic compounds that stimulate uterine contractions, I was shaking. I am so grateful this information exists.”
👩🏾
Ngozi O., 30
Owerri, Imo State
★★★★★
Today's Special Price
The Pregnant Woman's Pain-Free Guide
Cost over ₦120,000 to research, verify, and create
₦10,500 ₦6,999
You save ₦3,501 today
🎁 Free Bonus #1
The Nigerian Pregnancy Food & Nutrition Chart
Trimester-by-trimester food guide using Nigerian market staples. Maps each food to its pregnancy benefit.
Value: ₦2,500 — yours FREE today
🎁 Free Bonus #2
The Labour Pain Survival Toolkit
Complete labour breathing guide, 5 labour positions, the 5-1-1 rule, and a Birth Companion Instruction Card.
Value: ₦1,800 — yours FREE today
Payments handled by Selar.co — Nigeria's most trusted digital product platform
⚠ This Price Is Available to the First 50 Buyers Only
After 50 orders, the price returns permanently to ₦10,500. Do not close this page and come back later.
🛡️
30-Day Full Money-Back Guarantee
Download the guide. Read it. Use the methods for a full 30 days. If you do not find practical, usable guidance — send me one email and I will refund every single kobo. No questions. No arguments. No wahala.

Questions People Ask Before Ordering

I am not good with technology. How do I receive the guide?
After payment on Selar, you receive an automatic email with a download link. Click the link and the PDF opens directly on your phone or computer. If you have any difficulty, WhatsApp me directly on 08082656352.
I am already in my third trimester. Is it too late for this to help me?
No — the guide has dedicated chapters for the third trimester covering sciatica, SPD, Braxton Hicks, labour preparation, and the complete emergency warning signs chapter. Even at 38 weeks, this guide has critical information for you right now.
I have sickle cell disease (SS genotype). Is there specific guidance for me?
Yes — Chapter 8 has an entire dedicated section on SCD in pregnancy covering the dehydration protocol, temperature protection, infection prevention, the home vs. hospital crisis decision guide, and Acute Chest Syndrome recognition.

You Deserve to Be Comfortable
in Your Own Pregnancy

The Pregnant Woman's Pain-Free Guide gives you the knowledge, the tools, and the confidence to manage your pregnancy pain safely — on your own terms, in your own home, right here in Nigeria.

Question before buying? WhatsApp: 08082656352

Whatever you decide, please remember this one thing — free, no purchase required: do not take Ibuprofen or Diclofenac after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

Tell every pregnant woman you know. That single fact, shared widely enough, will save babies.

With love and solidarity,
Chisom Okafor
Mama Strong Blog · Enugu, Nigeria