TY - JOUR
T1 - 'Our hands are bound'
T2 - Pathways to community health labour in Kenya
AU - Dodworth, Kathy
AU - Mukungu, Brenda N.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank Ayaz Qureshi and Kevin Donovan, as well as the anonymous reviewers, who reviewed earlier drafts of this work. We thank the British Institute in East Africa and the Institute of Anthropology, Gender and African Studies at the University of Nairobi , where this work was presented. The authors thank Charles Owuor Olungah for his ongoing support at the University of Nairobi and the supportive staff in Isiolo County's Department of Health . Lastly, the authors offer their heartfelt appreciation to their support network for their unpaid labour, providing childcare to facilitate long periods of fieldwork away from home. The research is funded by Wellcome Trust UK , grant number 222199/Z/20/Z .
PY - 2023/9/1
Y1 - 2023/9/1
N2 - An ideal model of Community Health Worker (CHW) selection has existed since long before Alma Ata catalysed the community health approach, dating to late colonial times. In this model, a willing, trusted, relatively well-educated and secure member of the community with proven aptitude is openly elected by their leadership, peers or relevant committee. Their participation is entirely voluntary and that voluntarism is symbolic of their community's participation as a whole. While this imagery is long-embedded in CHW storytelling, such practice is rare. While elements of this ‘model pathway’ exist, a myriad of structural and agential factors shape who becomes a CHW, how and why. Through life history interviews over twelve months 2022–2023 with 68 CHWs in Isiolo, northern Kenya (known as CHVs), we explore predominant pathways to community health labour as told through stories. We articulate five such pathways: model, handpicked, shadow, outsider and, most importantly, dispossession. Through telling five CHVs' stories, we present each ‘ideal type’ but also explore how each pathway is not singular, rather overlapping in complex, context-specific ways. These pathways confound Western-centric, Western-promoted notions of voluntarism and indeed community health, which cannot explain why such labour endures. We conclude that our findings provide a timely commentary on how voluntary labour within health continues to tax structural poverty and frustrated life chances in lieu of concrete and expansive investments in human resources for health by governments and health agencies both North and South. In understanding voluntary labour as a form of structural violence, we can better elucidate the historical dependency on this work in impoverished regions and how the undervaluing of such work persists over time.
AB - An ideal model of Community Health Worker (CHW) selection has existed since long before Alma Ata catalysed the community health approach, dating to late colonial times. In this model, a willing, trusted, relatively well-educated and secure member of the community with proven aptitude is openly elected by their leadership, peers or relevant committee. Their participation is entirely voluntary and that voluntarism is symbolic of their community's participation as a whole. While this imagery is long-embedded in CHW storytelling, such practice is rare. While elements of this ‘model pathway’ exist, a myriad of structural and agential factors shape who becomes a CHW, how and why. Through life history interviews over twelve months 2022–2023 with 68 CHWs in Isiolo, northern Kenya (known as CHVs), we explore predominant pathways to community health labour as told through stories. We articulate five such pathways: model, handpicked, shadow, outsider and, most importantly, dispossession. Through telling five CHVs' stories, we present each ‘ideal type’ but also explore how each pathway is not singular, rather overlapping in complex, context-specific ways. These pathways confound Western-centric, Western-promoted notions of voluntarism and indeed community health, which cannot explain why such labour endures. We conclude that our findings provide a timely commentary on how voluntary labour within health continues to tax structural poverty and frustrated life chances in lieu of concrete and expansive investments in human resources for health by governments and health agencies both North and South. In understanding voluntary labour as a form of structural violence, we can better elucidate the historical dependency on this work in impoverished regions and how the undervaluing of such work persists over time.
KW - community health
KW - structural violence
KW - voluntarism
KW - Kenya
KW - labour
KW - dispossession
UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/social-science-and-medicine
U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116126
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116126
M3 - Article
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 332
JO - Social Science & Medicine
JF - Social Science & Medicine
M1 - 116126
ER -