(PlusNews) Violet
Tinah, 40, a resident of Korogocho slum in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi,
is living with HIV and was recently diagnosed with tuberculosis, but
her biggest problem today is not disease - but hunger.
"When I went for the results that informed me that I had TB, I was very
hungry; I'd had no breakfast and lunch and could barely walk," she told
IRIN/PlusNews. "I had to be supported and put in a wheelchair to
collect the drugs.
"Often I go without food and during such times I feel dizzy and
nauseous after swallowing the [TB and HIV] drugs," the formerly
prosperous carpenter added. "Putting food on the table is like a
dream."
On the day she spoke to IRIN/PlusNews, Tinah had had only a cup of
black tea for breakfast and no lunch; a concerned neighbour has brought
her some porridge "to help me swallow my drugs". Tinah was hoping her
unemployed nephew would pass by later with a little food.
Many of the slum's residents live on food salvaged from a nearby rubbish dump and sold on the streets of Korogocho.
According to a 2009 World Bank poverty assessment, the poor in Kenya
spend 70 percent of their income on food on average - those in the
poorest 20 percent of the population spend 77 percent. Sharp increases
in the price of staples in 2008 - maize flour rose by as much as 130
percent between 2008 and 2009 - and a national food crisis in 2009 mean
poverty has been on the rise.
The urban poor, most of whom do not farm, have been particularly hard hit.
Korogocho
location chief Rebecca Balongo told IRIN/PlusNews that many programmes
supporting HIV-affected households had collapsed. "It is not unusual to
have a family share only a plate of food in a day," he said.
Little help
The Kenya Network of Women with AIDS, which until 2009 provided food
assistance to about 4,000 HIV-positive people in slums in central
Kenya, has had to shut down its feeding programme due to lack of
funding.
"We are no longer giving food at our drop-in centres in Korogocho,
Kiambiu, Soweto and Mathare slums in Nairobi, Kiandutu slums in Thika
and Kiawara slums in Nyeri town," said KENWA advocacy programme officer
James Ndung'u.
"KENWA is only providing highly nutritious porridge to the very weak and bedridden clients.
"The slums have high HIV prevalence rates and without food there are
challenges; our nurse has reported clients failing to collect ARVs on
schedule - they say they are busy looking for work to buy food," he
added. "ARVs require one to have a proper diet, but on an empty
stomach, there is a tendency to default and consequent risk of drug
resistance."
A few programmes continue to provide support in the form of food or
cash transfers. Concern Worldwide has started a cash transfer programme
in Korogocho to provide food subsidies of about US$20 per month to
2,000 extremely vulnerable households, including bed-ridden
HIV-positive people. (PlusNews)

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