Cell phones help positive living
Written by: Thomson Reuters Foundation alumnus
Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.

A mobile phone user types out a short message service (SMS) communication on his phone in Sydney. REUTERS/Will Burgess
By Kamal Raj Sigdel, from Nepal, who attended a TRF 'Reporting HIV/Aids' course in Nairobi. This article was published on the front page of the Kathmandu Post George Mburu's cell phone beeps on Sunday at his home in Nairobi's Majengo slum. He reads a message reminding him to take his medicine. Mburu, 32, is one of 500 HIV-positive patients in Nairobi who receive an SMS every Sunday from the HAART Cell Phone Study Centre, a government initiative experimenting with cell phones in the treatment and prevention of HIV infection. Over two million people are infected with the virus in Kenya, and four out of five Kenyans with HIV are unaware of their status, according to the Kenya AIDS Indicator Survey. The prevalent stigma has stopped many from visiting clinics. However, the cell phone project aims to tackle this problem by offering a discreet monitoring system. "We hope to take this pilot programme to a massive scale by next year," said Coordinator Sarah Karanja. "The patients have found it very helpful and want it to continue. The results are very exciting." Mburu, speaking at the HIV Clinic in Pumwani, said: "For the last two years, SMS have been reminding me about my anti-retroviral doses. "I feel much better now. I know someone, somewhere is taking care of me." The private nature of cell phone communication seems to be a key to the project's success. "Cell phones serve as a great alternative helping patients overcome the fear of being noticed and stigmatised," said Karanja. Besides, the SMS programme has been emerging as one of the best means of promoting behavioural change. "Before I came here, I was depressed," said Virginia, a 35-year-old mother who was at the HIV Clinic in Pumwani to know whether her three-month-old baby had been infected with HIV. "Now, with strict adherence, treatment, and care, I have regained my health." She is one of the lucky 17 percent HIV infected (350,000) receiving anti-retroviral treatment. "The biggest challenge in combating HIV is adherence to anti-retroviral therapy," said Dr. Francis Nyamiobo, a senior doctor at the clinic. "The most efficient solution, I think, lies in utilising personal gadgets like cell phones to reach out to the target population."
Reuters AlertNet is not responsible for the content of external websites.
We welcome argument but AlertNet will not publish comments that are racist, abusive or libellous.
Leave a Reply
When you submit a comment to us we request your name, e-mail address and optionally a link to a website. Please note where you submit a website address, we may link to it via your name. By sending us a comment, you accept that we have the right to show the comment and your name to users. Although we require your email address, this will not be published on the site, and is only required to enable us to check facts with you, e.g. if you are making a claim we can not confirm easily. Additionally, if you would like your comment removed at anytime, you'll have to use this e-mail address when you contact us. To remove a comment at any time please e-mail us at blogs-(at)-reuters-(dot)-com (address obscured to avoid spam) specifying who you are and what you would like removed. We moderate all comments and will publish everything that advances the post directly or with relevant tangential information. We reserve the right to edit comments in order to maintain the quality of the comments, and may not include links to irrelevant material. We try not to publish comments that we think are offensive or appear to pass you off as another person, and we will be conservative if comments may be considered libelous. Reuters will use your data in accordance with Reuters privacy policy. Reuters Group is primarily responsible for managing your data. As Reuters is a global company your data will be transferred and available internationally, including in countries which do not have privacy laws but Reuters seeks to comply with its privacy policy.
All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content in this article, including by framing or by similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.