According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, NCDs account for the death of 41 million people each year which equates to over 70% of global deaths. It is reported that social economic and structural factors including unhealthy lifestyles have exacerbated the NCD crisis that is responsible for the premature annual deaths of 15 million people before the age of 70. The high burden of NCDs is responsible for increasing the cost of health care, promotion of unproductivity and financial insecurity[1]. Organization of NCD services at the PHC level is limited by a myriad of factors such as non-adherence to standard treatment guidelines and protocols, under-regulation of informal and for-profit practitioners, poor health information system and record-keeping, and poor health care provider coordination. This is in addition to inadequate functional referral services, medicine, diagnostic facilities, and logistics supplies. Another challenge relates to the work force which is inadequately skilled to effectively diagnose and treat NCD cases. The availability of NCD-related policy frameworks, the large network of healthcare infrastructure, and the high demand for NCD services are some of the major opportunities[2].