| 2008 Country Profile: Kenya PDF version

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2008 Country Profile: Kenya
National HIV prevalence among adults (ages 15-49): 4.9 percent1
Adults and children (ages 0-49) living with HIV at the end of 2007: 1.1 million1
AIDS deaths (adults and children) in 2007: 73,0001
AIDS orphans at the end of 2007: 1.1 million1
Kenya is one of PEPFAR’s 15 focus countries, which collectively represent approximately 50 percent of HIV infections worldwide. Under PEPFAR, Kenya received nearly $92.5 million in Fiscal Year (FY) 2004, more than $142.9 million in FY 2005, approximately $208.3 million in FY 2006, and $368.1 million in FY 2007 to support comprehensive HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and care programs. PEPFAR is providing nearly $534.8 million in FY 2008.
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| PEPFAR Results in Kenya |
| # of individuals receiving antiretroviral treatment as of September 30, 20081 |
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229,700 |
| # of HIV-positive individuals who received care and support in FY2007 (including TB/HIV)1 |
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452,800 |
| # of orphans and vulnerable children (OVCs) who were served by an OVC program in FY20071 |
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290,800 |
| # of pregnant women receiving HIV counseling and testing services for PMTCT since the beginning of PEPFAR1,2 |
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2,012,000 |
| # of HIV-positive pregnant women receiving antiretroviral prophylaxis for PMTCT since the beginning of the PEPFAR1,3 |
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121,600 |
| # of counseling and testing encounters (in settings other than PMTCT) in FY20071 |
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917,100 |
| # of individuals reached with community outreach HIV/AIDS prevention programs that promote Abstinence and/or Being Faithful in FY2007 |
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3,739,600 |
| # of individuals reached with community outreach HIV/AIDS prevention activities that promote Condoms and related prevention services in FY2007 |
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3,084,600 |
| # of USG condoms shipped from Calendar Year 2004 to 2007 |
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40,002,000 |
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Note: Numbers may be adjusted as attribution criteria and reporting systems are refined.
Numbers above 100 are rounded to nearest 100.
1 Total results combine individuals reached through downstream and upstream support.
2 It is possible that some individuals were counseled and tested more than once.
3 It is possible that some pregnant women received antiretroviral prophylaxis more than once over the four-year period, e.g. HIV positive women who were pregnant more than once.
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PEPFAR Achievements in Kenya to Date |
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HIV/AIDS in Kenya
Kenya has a severe, generalized HIV epidemic, but in recent years, the country has experienced a notable decline in HIV prevalence, attributed in part to significant behavioral change and increased access to ART. National adult HIV prevalence is estimated to have fallen from 10 percent in the late 1990s to about 4.9 percent in 2007.1,2 Women face considerably higher risk of HIV infection than men, and also experience a shorter life expectancy due to HIV/AIDS. The 7th edition of AIDS in Kenya reports an HIV prevalence rate of eight percent in adult women and four percent in adult men.2 Populations in Kenya especially at risk include injecting drug users and people in prostitution, whose prevalence rates are estimated at 53 percent and 27 percent, respectively.
Challenges to PEPFAR Implementation
Kenya is in a transitional period, with a government seeking to restructure many elements of the state. This context offers clear opportunities, but also many constraints for controlling HIV/AIDS. Human capacity development is a major concern and all partners are working to improve
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| capabilities and human resource management systems to enable people to respond effectively to HIV/AIDS. Kenya has a large number of qualified, unemployed health care workers. The key to success will be developing effective mechanisms to engage these trained staff. In addition, efforts to employ auxiliary staff, such as adherence counselors and outreach workers, are a high priority. Treatment literacy is very low, which contributes to the high levels of stigma among health workers and the general population. Furthermore, for those who are receiving ART, systematic monitoring and evaluation is lacking.3
Critical PEPFAR Interventions for HIV/AIDS Prevention:
- Supported the national scale-up of prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission (PMTCT) services, including supporting antiretroviral prophylaxis for HIV-positive women during a total of 121,600 pregnancies from FY2004-FY2007, and supporting training or retraining of 3,000 health workers on Ministry of Health guidelines in FY2007.
- Supported services with a network of facilities providing maternal and child health services, including early infant HIV diagnosis.
- Supported abstinence and faithfulness activities primarily targeting youth including peer education, networking, community theater, mass media programs, and curriculum-based training.
- Collaborated with the Kenya Prisons Service to set up an integrated HIV program that provides HIV prevention messages to inmates, staff and members of the surrounding community.
- Supported the Kenyan National Blood Transfusion Service and blood donor mobilizing organizations to increase blood units collected. These efforts have been bolstered through public-private partnerships to identify low risk, regular blood donors in the workplace.
Critical PEPFAR Interventions for HIV/AIDS Treatment:
- Helped to increase the availability of treatment services throughout the country by supporting new clinical sites in underserved areas.
- Coordinated with other international partners to achieve synergy between activities aimed at scaling-up access to ART.
Critical PEPFAR Interventions for HIV/AIDS Care:
- Employed community health workers to support adherence to medication regimens and to increase monitoring of those receiving assistance.
- Supported rapid and broad expansion of diagnostic counseling and testing to identify and refer for care those who are co-infected with HIV and tuberculosis.
- Supported the training, provision of supplies, and expansion of mobile counseling and testing services utilizing vans, bicycles, and even camels to reach some of Kenya’s most remote and vulnerable populations.
- Supported the provision of community-based psychosocial support to people living with HIV/AIDS.
1 UNAIDS, Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic, 2008.
2 Ministry of Health, AIDS in Kenya, 7th edition, 2005.
3 WHO, Summary Country Profile on HIV/AIDS Treatment Scale-up – Kenya, 2005. |
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