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Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya: the need for human rights-based alternatives

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya: the need for human rights-based alternatives. / Mburu, Gitau; Restoy, Enrique ; Kibuchi, Evaline et al.
In: Health and Human Rights Journal, Vol. 18, No. 1, 01.06.2016, p. 43-54.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Mburu, G, Restoy, E, Kibuchi, E, Holland, PJ & Harries, A 2016, 'Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya: the need for human rights-based alternatives', Health and Human Rights Journal, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 43-54.

APA

Mburu, G., Restoy, E., Kibuchi, E., Holland, P. J., & Harries, A. (2016). Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya: the need for human rights-based alternatives. Health and Human Rights Journal, 18(1), 43-54.

Vancouver

Mburu G, Restoy E, Kibuchi E, Holland PJ, Harries A. Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya: the need for human rights-based alternatives. Health and Human Rights Journal. 2016 Jun 1;18(1):43-54.

Author

Mburu, Gitau ; Restoy, Enrique ; Kibuchi, Evaline et al. / Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya : the need for human rights-based alternatives. In: Health and Human Rights Journal. 2016 ; Vol. 18, No. 1. pp. 43-54.

Bibtex

@article{e68bc3a0e74749eb93117957f80e4972,
title = "Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya: the need for human rights-based alternatives",
abstract = "Adherence to treatment is a key element for global TB control. Public health laws can be used to enforce isolation, adherence, and completion of TB treatment. However, the practical application of public health laws can potentially range from voluntary measures to involuntary detention approaches. This paper explores the potential risks and impacts of using detention approaches to enforce TB treatment adherence. In August 2015, we conducted a literature search regarding the application of public health laws to enforce adherence to TB treatment globally, and specifically in Kenya. Texts were analyzed using narrative synthesis. Results indicated that in Kenya, people lost to follow-up on TB treatment are frequently detained in prisons. However, incarceration and detention approaches curtail the rights to health, informed consent, privacy, freedom from non-consensual treatment, freedom from inhumane and degrading treatment, and freedom of movement of people lost to follow-up. Detention could also worsen social inequalities and lead to a paradoxical increase in TB incidence. We suggest the incorporation of less intrusive solutions in legislation and policies. These include strengthening health systems to reduce dependency on prisons as isolation spaces, decentralizing TB treatment to communities, enhancing treatment education, and addressing socioeconomic, and structural determinants associated with TB incidence and loss to follow-up.",
author = "Gitau Mburu and Enrique Restoy and Evaline Kibuchi and Holland, {Paula Jane} and Anthony Harries",
year = "2016",
month = jun,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "43--54",
journal = "Health and Human Rights Journal",
issn = "1079-0969",
publisher = "Harvard University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Detention of people lost to follow-up on TB treatment in Kenya

T2 - the need for human rights-based alternatives

AU - Mburu, Gitau

AU - Restoy, Enrique

AU - Kibuchi, Evaline

AU - Holland, Paula Jane

AU - Harries, Anthony

PY - 2016/6/1

Y1 - 2016/6/1

N2 - Adherence to treatment is a key element for global TB control. Public health laws can be used to enforce isolation, adherence, and completion of TB treatment. However, the practical application of public health laws can potentially range from voluntary measures to involuntary detention approaches. This paper explores the potential risks and impacts of using detention approaches to enforce TB treatment adherence. In August 2015, we conducted a literature search regarding the application of public health laws to enforce adherence to TB treatment globally, and specifically in Kenya. Texts were analyzed using narrative synthesis. Results indicated that in Kenya, people lost to follow-up on TB treatment are frequently detained in prisons. However, incarceration and detention approaches curtail the rights to health, informed consent, privacy, freedom from non-consensual treatment, freedom from inhumane and degrading treatment, and freedom of movement of people lost to follow-up. Detention could also worsen social inequalities and lead to a paradoxical increase in TB incidence. We suggest the incorporation of less intrusive solutions in legislation and policies. These include strengthening health systems to reduce dependency on prisons as isolation spaces, decentralizing TB treatment to communities, enhancing treatment education, and addressing socioeconomic, and structural determinants associated with TB incidence and loss to follow-up.

AB - Adherence to treatment is a key element for global TB control. Public health laws can be used to enforce isolation, adherence, and completion of TB treatment. However, the practical application of public health laws can potentially range from voluntary measures to involuntary detention approaches. This paper explores the potential risks and impacts of using detention approaches to enforce TB treatment adherence. In August 2015, we conducted a literature search regarding the application of public health laws to enforce adherence to TB treatment globally, and specifically in Kenya. Texts were analyzed using narrative synthesis. Results indicated that in Kenya, people lost to follow-up on TB treatment are frequently detained in prisons. However, incarceration and detention approaches curtail the rights to health, informed consent, privacy, freedom from non-consensual treatment, freedom from inhumane and degrading treatment, and freedom of movement of people lost to follow-up. Detention could also worsen social inequalities and lead to a paradoxical increase in TB incidence. We suggest the incorporation of less intrusive solutions in legislation and policies. These include strengthening health systems to reduce dependency on prisons as isolation spaces, decentralizing TB treatment to communities, enhancing treatment education, and addressing socioeconomic, and structural determinants associated with TB incidence and loss to follow-up.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 43

EP - 54

JO - Health and Human Rights Journal

JF - Health and Human Rights Journal

SN - 1079-0969

IS - 1

ER -