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<title>Department of Humanities &amp; Social Sciences</title>
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<dc:date>2026-05-25T13:22:34Z</dc:date>
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<title>HIV/AIDS: Household Coping Mechanisms of the Poor in Kenya Slums</title>
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<description>HIV/AIDS: Household Coping Mechanisms of the Poor in Kenya Slums
Ndolo, Urbanus M.
The National silence and persistent global disinterest in HIV and AIDS is worrying! Is this an &#13;
implication that a proper cure of this scourge is now discovered and readily in use? There is no &#13;
doubt the World has achieved a lot of progress in control and management of this disease. &#13;
However, the situation in Slum settlements in Kenya reveals centrally facts to the assumption &#13;
that HIV and AIDS are no longer a health risk to the society today since ARVs are freely &#13;
available. This book is an output of a study which focused on investigating how the poor in slum &#13;
settlements in Kenya are affected by HIV and AIDS and their survival tricks in coping with those &#13;
effects. It applied mixed research methods, where both qualitative and quantitative designs were &#13;
adopted. It sought to respond to the question: How do the poor in slums cope with the effects of &#13;
HIV and AIDS and how are they targeted in intervention programmes within the Government &#13;
and other Public Benefit Organizations(PBOs)? Qualitative methods of data collection such as &#13;
in-depth interviews guided by questionnaires, key informant discussions (KIDs), Focus Group &#13;
Discussions (FGDs) and observation were predominantly employed. Both qualitative and &#13;
qualitative methods of data analysis were used where specific themes generated key findings &#13;
which were presented in verbatim expressions to reveal the actual feelings as presented by the &#13;
respondents. Quantitative data were presented in frequency tables, percentages, pie charts, bar &#13;
graphs and histograms for comparative purposes. The study found that there is little presence of &#13;
the government in slums in almost all aspects like development projects, social order and social &#13;
security although administrative offices of assistant chiefs and in some cases chiefs camps exist. &#13;
This abnormality makes life in slums sort(s) of anarchy leading to numerous illegal activities to &#13;
exceedingly thrive beyond control since as they claim;             	&#13;
   The Government&#13;
presence lacks). The poor who are affected by HIV and AIDS engage on different survival tricks &#13;
like illegal brews, commercial sex work (exposing them to the same cycle of AIDS infections), &#13;
small scale businesses and casual work in industries and households as revealed by 132 (67%) of &#13;
the respondents. They live in abject poverty and inhabitable dwellings in the slum settlements &#13;
(See pictorial presentation on appendix). Some have resulted in selling the ARV drugs to earn a &#13;
living (they are used to accelerate fermentation of illegal brews). Theirs is vulnerable situation. &#13;
Indeed, with easy availability of ARV treatment, AIDS is no longer a threat according to the &#13;
inhabitants in the slums and therefore they do not care much as 168 (85.3%) in all the slums &#13;
under the study observed. Some see AIDS as an advantage since they would be selected for &#13;
support by PBOs, thus seek for infection as quick fix to desperate slum life as claimed 43 (22%) &#13;
in Kibra slums in Nairobi. On the basis of these revelations, the study recommends a well &#13;
designed proactive network and inventory of all PBOs and religious movements working in the &#13;
slums since they are targeting the same clientele. This would help to avoid duplication of &#13;
services and overlap of resource allocation to the same beneficiaries. There is need to clearly &#13;
identify and empower HIV and AIDS orphans and grandparents who are overburdened in their &#13;
old age. It would help if they were assisted to establish sustainable income generating activities &#13;
to sustain their resource base as they take care of orphaned children. The youth should be &#13;
targeted for technical skills based training which would not only empower them and reduce &#13;
poverty but greatly address the social security concerns in slums and create harmony and &#13;
peaceful co-existence of the slum inhabitants. The youth are virtually idle! This exposes them to &#13;
substance abuse especially (Muguga) (Miraa (khat) leaves), violence and crime. If all the efforts &#13;
in slums were genuine, these settlements would be transformed into middle class settlements. &#13;
There is need for policy framework to deal with land tenure
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<dc:date>2018-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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