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Anthropology & Medicine

Volume 21, Issue 2, 2014

Special Issue:   Mediating Medical Technologies: Flows, Frictions and New Socialities

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Peer mentors, mobile phone and pills: collective monitoring and adherence in Kenyatta National Hospital's HIV treatment programme

Peer mentors, mobile phone and pills: collective monitoring and adherence in Kenyatta National Hospital's HIV treatment programme

DOI:
10.1080/13648470.2014.925083
Eileen Moyera*

pages 149-161

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© 2014 The Author(s). Published by Taylor & Francis.
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Abstract

In 2006, the Kenyan state joined the international commitment to make antiretroviral treatment free in public health institutions to people infected with HIV. Less than a decade later, treatment has reached over 60% of those who need it in Kenya. This paper, which is based on an in-depth ethnographic case study of the HIV treatment programme at Kenyatta National Hospital, conducted intermittently between 2008 and 2014, examines how HIV-positive peer mentors encourage and track adherence to treatment regimens within and beyond the clinic walls using mobile phones and computer technology. This research into the everyday practices of patient monitoring demonstrates that both surveillance and adherence are collective activities. Peer mentors provide counselling services, follow up people who stray from treatment regimens, and perform a range of other tasks related to patient management and treatment adherence. Despite peer mentors’ involvement in many tasks key to encouraging optimal adherence, their role is rarely acknowledged by co-workers, hospital administrators, or public health officials. Following a biomedical paradigm, adherence at Kenyatta and in Kenya is framed by programme administrators as something individual clients must do and for which they must be held accountable. This framing simultaneously conceals the sociality of adherence and undervalues the work of peer mentors in treatment programmes.

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Details

  • Citation information:
  • Received: 7 May 2014
  • Accepted: 13 May 2014
  • Published online: 30 Aug 2014

Author affiliations

  • a Department of Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1012 DK, the Netherlands

Author biographies

Eileen Moyer is associate professor of cultural and medical anthropology at the University of Amsterdam. Her research focuses on HIV, youth cultures, and urban health in eastern Africa, particularly Tanzania and Kenya.

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