Fever pitch: Coloniality and contention within community health’s yellow fever response in Kenya
In January 2022, a number of Yellow Fever cases were identified in Kenya’s Isiolo County for the first time, triggering a national-level response centred on vaccinating residents. 181,000 people were vaccinated in July, around 72% of the eligible population. In the face of this ostensible success, t...
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| Main Authors: | , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Taylor & Francis Group
2025-12-01
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| Series: | Global Public Health |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/17441692.2025.2519659 |
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| Summary: | In January 2022, a number of Yellow Fever cases were identified in Kenya’s Isiolo County for the first time, triggering a national-level response centred on vaccinating residents. 181,000 people were vaccinated in July, around 72% of the eligible population. In the face of this ostensible success, this article explores the continuing coloniality, that is, long-standing patterns of domination, operating within disease control in Kenya’s northeast, whereby punitive encounters with the state loom large. Despite health matters being devolved, top-down implementation from nationally-controlled actors exacerbated local distrust, resulting in contention around the roll-out and of the authorities behind it. This article, drawing on ethnography supplemented by in-depth interviews and Focus Group Discussions over 12 months 2022-2023, centres the experiences of Community Health Volunteers (CHVs) over the ten-day campaign. We adopt a Fanonian lens to interpret our findings, historicizing the contention CHVs faced from their communities, in a region where governmental approaches oscillate between neglect and heavy-handed remedial action. We operationalise Fanon’s ‘psychoexistential complex’, whereby CHVs internalise the conflict between their roles of community representative and state-enforcer, exacerbated by their precarity and invisibility to others. We conclude with a call for CHVs’ place to be protected, capacitated and seen within outbreak response. |
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| ISSN: | 1744-1692 1744-1706 |