Anthropology & MedicineVolume 21, Issue 2, 2014Special Issue: Mediating Medical Technologies: Flows, Frictions and New Socialities |
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pages 136-148
The availability of free antiretroviral treatment in public health facilities since 2004 has contributed to the increasing biomedicalization of AIDS care in Kenya. This has been accompanied by a reduction of funding for community-based care and support organizations since the 2008 global economic crisis and a consequent donor divestment from HIV projects in Africa. This paper explores the ways that HIV interventions, including support groups, home-based care and antiretroviral treatments have shaped expectations regarding relations of care in the low-income area of Kibera in Nairobi, Kenya, over the last decade. Findings are based on 20 months of ethnographic research conducted in Nairobi between January 2011 and August 2013. By focusing on three eras of HIV treatment – pre-treatment, treatment scale-up, and post-crisis – the authors illustrate how family and community-based care have changed with shifts in funding. Many support groups that previously provided HIV care in Kibera, where the state is largely absent and family networks are thin, have been forced to cut services. Large-scale HIV treatment programmes may allow the urban poor in Nairobi to survive, but they are unlikely to thrive. Many care needs continue to go unmet in the age of treatment, and many economically marginal people who had found work in care-oriented community-based organizations now find themselves jobless or engaged in work not related to HIV.
Eileen Moyer is associate professor of cultural and medical anthropology at the University of Amsterdam. Her research has focused on HIV, youth cultures, and urban health in eastern Africa, particularly Tanzania and Kenya.
Emmy Kageha Igonya is a PhD researcher at the University of Amsterdam. Her research is on the emergence and transformation of community-based HIV support in Nairobi, Kenya.