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Care as repair, but whose responsibility? Front-line health workers’ resourcefulness in implementing a PMTCT tracing policy in Kenya

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dc.contributor.author De Angeles, Katrine Judith Chamorro
dc.contributor.author Storey, Simone
dc.contributor.author Nordberg, Bj¨orn
dc.contributor.author Kaguiri, Eunice
dc.contributor.author Richards, John Dusabe-
dc.contributor.author Ekstr¨om, Anna Mia
dc.contributor.author Were, Edwin
dc.contributor.author Skovdal, Morten
dc.contributor.author Kågesten, Anna
dc.date.accessioned 2025-08-05T11:49:14Z
dc.date.available 2025-08-05T11:49:14Z
dc.date.issued 2025-04-05
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/9873
dc.description.abstract Defaulter tracing policies for Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission (PMTCT) services are vital for achieving the global goal of zero new HIV infections. However, little is known about their implementation. This qualitative study explores the role of tracers—community volunteers, retention workers, and mentor mother- s—in implementing such policy across six facilities in Western Kenya. It uses the conceptual lens of ’repair work’ to unveil their ‘everyday work in keeping systems going’ ensuring care delivery to women and their infants. Data were collected through 31 semi-structured interviews with tracers and PMTCT managers, observations, docu- ment reviews, and analyzed using thematic network analysis. Our findings reveal significant variability in policy implementation, influenced by integration of PMTCT services to maternal and child health clinics and facility resources. Tracing and retaining women in PMTCT care heavily relied on tracers’ adaptive strategies and in- genuity to compensate – through repair work – for systemic shortcomings, resulting in the delivery of differ- entiated, person-centered care using social networks, personal funds and improvisations. Key challenges included inadequate remuneration, lack of institutional resources and support, and insufficient information and evalua- tion systems. Our results highlight the social nature of health systems and demonstrate the relevance of ’repair work’ for health systems research, used in our paper to unveil the often-unrecognized efforts of tracers in maintaining PMTCT care continuity. To ensure sustainable and effective translation of policy into practice, policymakers, donors and program managers must allocate sufficient resources, and provide formal employmentI think those were innovations that the healthcare staff developed themselves to ensure services were not interrupted. However, the reason they haven’t been institutionalized is that we cannot create a policy that imposes the burden of providing services on someone who has not been contractually engaged to do so.” (Key informant, NASCOP, Ministry of Health) Trained mentor mothers, who are peers living with HIV, have played a pivotal role in Kenya’s efforts to end pediatric AIDS and eliminate vertical HIV transmission, commonly referred to as mother-to-child transmission (Helova et al., 2021; Ministry of Health, National AIDS to tracers rather than relying on repair work to keep systems going en_US
dc.description.sponsorship 104 EACCR2 EDCTP-RegNet2015) en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Elsevier en_US
dc.subject PMTCT en_US
dc.subject Defaulter tracing en_US
dc.subject Repair work en_US
dc.subject Care engagement en_US
dc.subject HIV en_US
dc.subject Policy implementation en_US
dc.title Care as repair, but whose responsibility? Front-line health workers’ resourcefulness in implementing a PMTCT tracing policy in Kenya en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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