DSpace Repository

Ethical implications of obtaining voluntary informed consent on Kombewa health and demographic surveillance system in Western Kenya

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Mukhwana, Audrey Nafuna
dc.date.accessioned 2023-01-31T12:29:44Z
dc.date.available 2023-01-31T12:29:44Z
dc.date.issued 2022
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/7247
dc.description.abstract Background:. Several studies on informed consent in health research have been conducted, but few have focused on the three levels of obtaining informed consent on a Health Demographic and Surveillance System research, namely consenting the Community, Household, and Individual. Before consenting an individual participant in a Health Demographic Surveillance System, the researcher must obtain consent from two higher levels: The goal of this study was to describe how these three levels of consent, along with various socio-cultural factors, influenced the process of obtaining voluntary informed consent on the Kombewa Health Demographic Surveillance System. The study also looked into the difficulties that the researchers faced. on the Health Demographic Surveillance System and how they used best practices to solve presenting challenges to the consenting process. Objectives: The study addressed three specific objectives. (i) To describe the process of obtaining informed consent on Kombewa Health Demographic Surveillance System in Western Kenya. (2) To establish socio-cultural factors that influenced the ethical practice of obtaining informed consent on the Kombewa Health Demographic Surveillance System. (3) To explain the challenges and best practices of obtaining informed consent on the Kombewa Health Demographic Surveillance System. Method: A cross-sectional study, utilizing mixed methods. Simple random sampling was used to select 384 research participants for the questionnaire. In addition, purposive sampling was applied to enlist 12 researchers for key informant interviews. The analysis was done to evaluate consenting and its relationship with socio-cultural factors, with a focus on intrapersonal factors like gender influence, interpersonal factors like household head influence, and community factors like community gate keepers influence. In addition, thematic content analysis was applied to analyse qualitative data. Results: The three levels of consenting in the Health Demographic Surveillance System influenced the process of obtaining informed consent. Furthermore, the study discovered that researchers on the Health Demographic Surveillance System faced a variety of sociocultural challenges, such as reliance on authority, the influence of household heads, and individual and community expectations to consent to participate in research. Despite the difficulties participants faced and the monotony of re- consenting, researchers made every effort to overcome them. These best practices are presented as lessons for future health researchers to learn from, as well as solutions to challenges. Researchers overcame the challenges by using strategies to obtain voluntary informed consent on the Kombewa Health Demographic Surveillance System, which other health researchers should follow. Conclusion: The Health Demographic Surveillance System consenting process occurred at three levels, with consent from the top two levels, community and household, influencing individual consenting autonomy. Recommendation: Health researchers should strive to protect individual autonomy in the Health Demographic Surveillance System by obtaining individual informed consent. en_US
dc.publisher Moi University en_US
dc.subject Health demographic surveillance system en_US
dc.subject Socio-cultural factors en_US
dc.title Ethical implications of obtaining voluntary informed consent on Kombewa health and demographic surveillance system in Western Kenya en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account