In 2000, a staggering 9.3 percent of all adults in Kenya were HIV-positive. At the same time, because the drugs were in short supply, World Health Organization guidelines stipulated that lifesaving antiretrovirals (ARVs) should only be administered once a patient’s CD4 count, which measures immune system health, fell below a very low mark. It meant patients had to be extremely sick to access ARVs, and for many, that was too late.
5:27, 5:26, 5:25…
That grim landscape was recent history when Dotty discovered she was pregnant in 2007, at age 19. During a prenatal visit, a clinician told Dotty she was HIV-positive, and pointed her to a treatment clinic two hours away. There was no counselling, no compassion, and no follow-up.
The experience left her traumatised and in denial — she didn’t tell anyone about her status and didn’t seek treatment.
Dotty’s son died in her arms at just six weeks old. He was buried in a cooking oil box — the smallest they could find.
A few months later, Dotty went to the Embakasi Health Centre.