Health sector inadequacies in attending to child survivors of sexual abuse in Kenya: An operations research
Document Type
Article (peer-reviewed)
Publication Date
2018
Abstract
In 2015, LVCT Health (a Kenyan non‐governmental organisation) conducted an exploratory study to assess the quality and comprehensiveness of services provided to child survivors of sexual violence at two public health facilities in Kenya. Both quantitative and qualitative data collection methods were used, including a retrospective review of 164 child survivor medical records, a health facility staff inventory, in‐depth interviews with 31 healthcare providers and 19 exit interviews with 14 child survivors and their caregivers. Ethical approval was obtained from two independent ethics committees. Quantitative data were analysed using SPSS version 22, while qualitative data were analysed using NVivo 10 based on a thematic coding framework. The health facility staff inventory indicated that only two out of 581 providers had undergone previous training on the management of child survivors of sexual violence. Both health facilities lacked the appropriate equipment for the collection of forensic evidence from children and private rooms in which to conduct the clinical examination. Providers cited challenges in offering psychosocial support to children. Only 27 per cent of child survivors were documented to have received trauma counselling. There is a need for health facilities to enhance their human resource and infrastructural capacity to facilitate the delivery of comprehensive care to child survivors.
Recommended Citation
Ajema, Carol, Chi-Chi Undie, Charity Mbugua, Jordan Kyongo, and Lina Digolo. 2018. "Health sector inadequacies in attending to child survivors of sexual abuse in Kenya: An operations research," Child Abuse Review 27(6): 475–485.
DOI
10.1002/car.2533
Language
English
Project
Addressing SGBV among Vulnerable Populations in East and Southern Africa; Expanding the Evidence Base on Comprehensive Care for Survivors of Sexual Violence in East and Southern Africa