For the best experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.
It is a scary time to be a university student in Kenya.
Statistics indicate that the rate of HIV infection among
university students is higher than ever. Recent reports from the World Health Organization
Reference Centre ranked Kenyan universities according to their HIV prevalence.
According to the findings, the University of Nairobi (UoN) has the highest
prevalence at 15 per cent, while Strathmore University had the lowest rate at 2
per cent.
For most university students, this information is not too surprising;
given the lifestyles they see their colleagues living. According to Mary, a
business administration student from UoN, ‘sponsor’ relationships play a role in
exposing students to the virus.
“I think university students are at a greater risk because
of their relationships with older people, who are probably married. Ladies, for
example, carry on several sexual relationships in addition to the one they have
with their sponsors. Naturally, if they have unprotected sex with any one of
these people, it starts off a chain,” she says.
Alex, a fourth-year agribusiness student at Kenyatta
University, believes campus ladies are no longer wary of the deadly disease.
“They are more concerned about not getting pregnant,” he
says. “It is okay to visit them without a condom, but you must buy the P2
emergency contraceptive. Somehow, they stopped worrying about HIV/AIDS or
STIs,” said Alex.
Patricia, another student, attributes the rampant sexual
activities in universities to the fact that students in campuses have nothing
else to occupy them, so they resort to sex.
“It mostly happens within hostels. The male and female
living areas are right next to each other, and there is no rules restricting
movements between them. So, male students can enter female hostels at will, and
vice versa. When you have students living this close to each other, with
nothing else to do, they are bound to engage in sex,” he added.
Universities have however disputed these findings,
questioning the authenticity of the report and the research methods.
Michelle, a counselling psychologist at Kenyatta
University’s VCT Centre, told Campus Vibe that the actual rates of infection at
the university are much lower. “We conduct regular testing at the university,”
she says, “If the VCT Centre gets less than five students coming in for tests
in a day, how was this research conducted? We have our own data; the numbers
are not that high.”
Professor Erastus Njoka, the Vice Chancellor at Chuka
University has encouraged universities to implement policies that encourage
morality among their students. Chuka University had the joint lowest rates in
public universities according to the study.
“At Chuka, we meet our students regularly and talk to them
about morality. We test them periodically, which I think also helps discourage
reckless behavior,” says Professor Njoka.
“They came to university to study and nothing else,” he
added.
Stay informed. Subscribe to our newsletter