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Frédérique Vallières , Adebola Adedimeji , David Kimani & Esther Nyokabi

A community based participatory situational analysis of orphans and vulnerable children RIFT VALLEY PROVINCE, KENYA. Frédérique Vallières , Adebola Adedimeji , David Kimani & Esther Nyokabi. Background. 47.5 million children in sub-Saharan Africa have lost of one or both parents (WHO 2010)

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Frédérique Vallières , Adebola Adedimeji , David Kimani & Esther Nyokabi

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  1. A community based participatory situational analysis of orphans and vulnerable childrenRIFT VALLEY PROVINCE, KENYA FrédériqueVallières, AdebolaAdedimeji, David Kimani & Esther Nyokabi

  2. Background • 47.5 million children in sub-Saharan Africa have lost of one or both parents(WHO 2010) • Burden of caring for additional children falls on ageing populations(Bicegoet al. 2003, FHI 2005, UNICEF 2005)

  3. What are OVC? A construct often used to categorize children who are orphaned and/or who are at an increased risk of long-term damage caused by material, emotional and social deprivations in their environment (Skinner 2006).

  4. What are OVC?

  5. What are OVC?

  6. What are OVC? A Kenyan context • Actual number of orphans is unknown but 2.4 million orphans are said to be in need of care and support (CGHD 2009, NACC 2009) • According to the National AIDS Control Council,11% of children under the age of 15 are orphans (NACC 2007) • The government of Kenya has a national action plan specifically directed at OVC (NACC 2009) • The Kenyan government has yet to agree on a working definition of OVC (CGHD 2009) • Government discussions on OVC in Kenya focus primarily on factors directly related to HIV (NACC 2009)

  7. What does past researchsay about ovc?   • Mental health risks: anxious and depressive symptoms and disorders (Atwineet al. 2005). • Morbidity • Physical health risks: diarrhoeal, acute respiratory, HIV infection (Watts et al. 2007) • Underperformance in school (Ainsworth et al. 2005) • Food insecurity (Schenk et al. 2008) • School enrolment and attendance rates (Case et al. 2004, Mishraet al. 2007) • Access to schooling (Andrews et al. 2006) • Access to health services (Andrews et al. 2006) • Household incomes (Booyseen & Bachman 2002) • Food consumption (UNICEF & UNAIDS 1999)

  8. Rationale • A need to scale-up responses towards OVC to respond to their needs • A need to conduct countrywide situational analyses OVC to assess risk • A need to increase the use of longitudinal follow-ups as a method of evaluating the effectiveness of OVC programmes over time

  9. CBPR – Community based participatory research “A collaborative approach to research that engages partners from a community in all phases of the research process with a shared goal of producing knowledge that will be translated into action or positive social change for the community”Lantz et al. (2006, p.239)

  10. Research Objectives • Identify the definition of OVC employed by local community-based interventions and compare it to the Kenyan government’s conceptualization of OVC. • Conduct a situational analysis of the OVC currently participating in the OVC programme. • Identify the most pressing needs of the OVC • Make specific recommendations on how and where to allocate available resources to the OVC in this context. • Make specific recommendations on how to improve the future training of community based care workers.

  11. Methodology Questionnaire Focus Group Discussions • Food intake, education, child’s relationship with guardian, HIV and AIDS, risk-taking behaviour • Translated and back translated • Pilot tested and trained interviewer • Analysed using Excel • 173 Questionnaires analysed. • Addressed the same topics as covered in Qs • Limited to 16-18 year olds • 7 females and 8 males in two different FGDs • Conducted by a nurse and public health officer • Analysed using FrameWork Approach (NCSR 2010)

  12. Results – Criteria for OVC • Their parents are living with HIV and AIDS • Are orphaned • Have parents or care givers who are ill or about to die • Do not have parents, a family or a home • Live in area with high HIV prevalence or proximity to high risk behavior • Live on the streets • Girl children are mostly considered vulnerable • Have their parents or guardians are in prison • Are isolated and discriminated against • Living on their own in child-headed house hold • Living in an unsupportive or unhealthy environment • Have inadequate medical care • Have a disability

  13. Results – Criteria for OVC • Their parents are living with HIV and AIDS • Are orphaned • Have parents or care givers who are ill or about to die • Do not have parents, a family or a home • Live in area with high HIV prevalence or proximity to high risk behavior • Live on the streets • Girl children are mostly considered vulnerable • Have their parents or guardians are in prison • Are isolated and discriminated against • Living on their own in child-headed house hold • Living in an unsupportive or unhealthy environment • Have inadequate medical care • Have a disability

  14. Results – OVC descriptives

  15. Results – OVC categorisation

  16. Results – Education At the time of the interview, participants had spent an average of 5.88 years in school (SD=3.132776545, CI95 =5.4, 6.3)

  17. Results – Relationship to guardian

  18. Results – HIV and AIDS • “Among those who use condoms, some use it occasionally while others use all the time but the majority use [condoms] all the time, owing to the fact that they are nowadays distributed for free by the government” • “AIDS is just a small disease and [some boys] think that you are naïve if you don’t have a girlfriend or AIDS” • “Principally use condoms to avoid getting pregnant, it is not even to avoid AIDS”.

  19. Results – Risky Behaviour “Cleaning” • “Cleaning is a famous Kikuyu traditional practice in which the newly circumcised boys are supposed to have sex immediately after healing, to clean the chemicals and medicine that was used on their organ during healing after the cut. They are then not supposed to have sex with that ‘cleaning girl’ ever again, otherwise they will be cursed and their private organs will burst…many promptly fulfill their promises.” (Boy, 17 years old)

  20. Results – Risky behaviour • “You’ll often find for us girls maybe you need something but the parent is not able to provide for that. So if we can’t get what we want we always go for alternatives, and most times we find ourselves desperate and desperate times call for desperate measures. So this drives us to engage in things that are not helpful in our lives.” (Girl, 17 years old)

  21. Discussion • A pressing need to develop an agreed upon definition of OVC that seeks guidance at the community level and allows for the different contextual interpretations of vulnerability • A need for national and international responses to be more flexible in their definition of OVC • Community groups are an important resource to assist in data collection assessing the needs of OVC as it is understood in each community

  22. Discussion

  23. Discussion - recommendations

  24. Conclusion • Supporting already existing community interventions and defining OVC at the community level we can decrease the risk of excluding children from programmes. • Reduce the probability that they will become OVC in the first place. • i.e. Increasing access to ARV for HIV +ve • Not increasing services to OVC only. Rather, what is more appropriate, is improving the access of all children to health, education and welfare services.

  25. References Ainsworth M., Beegle K. & Koda G. (2005) The impact of adult mortality and parental deaths on primary schooling in north-western Tanzania. Journal of Development Studies 41 (3), 412-439. Andrews G., Skinner D. & Zuma K. (2006) Epidemiology of health and vulnerability among children orphaned and made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa. AIDS Care 18 (3), 269-276. Atwine B., Cantor-Graae E. & Bajunirwe F. (2005) Psychological distress among AIDS orphans in rural Uganda. Social Science and Medicine 61 (3), 555-564. Bicego G., Rutstein S. & Johnson K. (2003) Dimensions of the emerging orphan crisis in sub-Saharan Africa. Social Science & Medicine 56 (6), 1235-1247.  Booysen F. & Bachman M. (2002) HIV/AIDS poverty and growth: Evidence from a household impact study conducted in the Free State province, South Africa. Centre for Health Systems Research & Development, Bloemfontein. Retrieved from http://www.csae.ox.ac.uk/conferences/2002-upagissa/papers/booysen-csae2002.pdf on 20 May 2010. Case A., Paxson C. & Ableidinger J. (2004) Orphans in Africa: parent, death, poverty, and school enrollment. Demography 41 (3), 483-508. Centre for Global Health and Development (2009) Kenya Research Situation Analysis on Orphans and Other Vulnerable Children Country Brief. CGHD, Boston. Retrieved from http://www.bu.edu/cghd/files/2009/12/Kenya-Research-Situation-Analysis-Country-Brief.pdf on 20 May 2010. Family Health International (2005) Conducting a Participatory Situation Analysis of Orphans and Vulnerable Children Affected by HIV/AIDS: Guidelines and Tools. FHI, Durham. Gregson S., Nyamukapa C.A., Garnett G.P., Wambe M., Lewis J.J.C., Mason P.R., Chandiwana S.K. & Anderson R.M. (2005) HIV infection and reproductive health in teenage women orphaned and made vulnerable by AIDS in Zimbabwe. AIDS Care 17 (7), 785-794. Lantz P.M., Israel B.A., Schulz A.J. & Reyes A. (2006) Community-based participatory research: rationale and relevance for social epidemiology. In Methods in Social Epidemiology. (Oakes J.M. & Kaufman J.S., eds) Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, pp. 239-266. Mishra V., Arnold F., Otieno F., Cross A. & Hong R. (2007) Education and Nutritional Status of Orphans and Children of HIV-Infected Parents in Kenya. AIDS Education and Prevention 19 (5), 383-395.

  26. References National AIDS Control Council (2007) Vulnerable Groups. NACC, Nairobi. Retrieved from http://www.nacc.or.ke/2007/default2.php?active_page_id=315 on 20 April 2010. National AIDS Control Council (2009) Kenya National HIV and AIDS Strategic Plan (KNASP) 2008/09-2012/13. NACC, Nairobi. Retrieved from http://www.nacc.or.ke/2007/images/downloads/knasp_iii.pdf on 20 April 2010. National Centre for Social Research. (2010) FrameWork: the qualitative data analysis tool. NCSR, London. Retrieved from http://www.natcen.ac.uk/framework on 20 July 2010. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (2006) Orphans and Other Vulnerable Children Programming Guidance for United States Government In-Country Staff and Implementing Partners. PEPFAR, Washington DC. Retrieved from http://www.pepfar.gov/documents/organization/83298.pdf on 20 May 2010. Schenk K., Ndhlovu L., Tembo S., Nsune A., Nkhata C., Walusiku B. & Watts C. (2008) Supporting orphans and vulnerable children affected by AIDS: using community-generated definitions to explore patterns of children’s vulnerability in Zambia. AIDS Care 20 (8), 894-903. Schenk K. (2009) Community interventions providing care and support to orphans and vulnerable children: a review of evaluation evidence. AIDS Care 21 (7), 918-942. United Nations Children’s Fund & United Nations Joint Programme on HIV/AIDS (1999) Children orphaned by HIV/AIDS: frontline responses from eastern and southern Africa. UNICEF, New York. United Nations Children’s Fund (2005) The state of the world’s children: Childhood under threat. UNICEF, New York. Watts H., Gregson S., Saito S., Lopman B., Beasley M. & Monasch R. (2007) Poorer health and nutritional outcomes in orphans and vulnerable children not explained by greater exposure to extreme poverty in Zimbabwe. Tropical Medicine and International Health 12 (5), 584-593. World Health Organization (2010) Millennium Development Goal 6. WHO, Geneva. Retrieved from http://www.who.int/hiv/topics/mdg/info/en/index.html on 10 February 2010.

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