“When They See a Wheelchair, They’ve Not Even Seen Me”—Factors Shaping the Experience of Disability Stigma and Discrimination in Kenya
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What are the factors that shape stigmatizing beliefs and interactions between Kenyans with and without disabilities?
- What is the role of AT that shapes stigmatizing beliefs and interactions between Kenyan with and without disabilities?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Context of the Studies
2.2. Study 1: Conceptualization of Disability and Assistive Technologies among Kenyan Youth without Disabilities
2.2.1. Participants and Procedures
2.2.2. Data Analysis
2.3. Study 2: Lived Experiences of Stigma and AT Use among Kenyans with Disabilities and Their Allies
2.3.1. Participants and Procedures
2.3.2. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Factors Shaping Disability Stigma
3.1.1. Study 1
What Is Disability?
“A disabled person faces many challenges. Let’s say going for nature calls, he has to be carried, he can’t wash, he can’t cook so he was dependent on neighbors and friends to bring him food”Iten group—P3
“We look at disability as someone who cannot manage themselves, but they can [only] do something through the help of people”Bondo group—P7
“If my child turns out to be disabled, I know I will feel [sorry about] it because he/she will go through a lot, there are challenges that he/she will face. Like, when I go to work, I would have to tend to the child before I go out. So, there are some issues that I would have to leave pending, so that I can tend to the child and then go my way”Mombasa group—P2
“What I know is that a doctor should be physically fit, when he/she hears of an emergency he goes”Iten group—P5
“Disability is about discrimination”Chavakali group—P4
“If he [a person with a disability] came with an intention of joining us, our activities will have to change so that he feels involved depending on his disability. If we one is deaf you can just write down thing and he can join”Nyeri group—P1
Societal Influences, Religion and Spiritual Beliefs
“It is usually jealousy because you can find that someone just hates you, so they consult a witch and then a spell is cast on you that may make something bad happen to you like an accident. Sometimes someone loses consciousness, so he will be disabled”Bondo group—P1
“I will go for the first four [people who acquired their disability as a result of accidents or diseases] and I will help them, but the other ones like the ones getting cursed, the community thinks if you help the cursed ones the curse will befall you too. Because you don’t know why they were cursed”Kilifi group—P5
“Where I am from there is nothing like that [referring to negative behaviour towards people with disabilities”. They [the elders] love them so much. And if you do something wrong to them [and] an old woman notices like discrimination, you will know that the heavens judge and we live on the same earth. They [the elders] encourage us not to hide them, and they [people with disabilities] should be taken to special schools so that they can get helped”Nyeri group—P2
“For example, I have found one [a person with disability] with luggage and helped them carry it to their destination and they appreciate it. The Bible states that a day should not end without someone being grateful for something you have done to them”Kilifi group—P3
Disability as Punishment
“There are many young people who smoke khat in our community. That is something I have seen happening and these persons who are using drugs, for example khat or bhang, have been warned on several occasions but he did no heed to this and then they go mad”Mombasa group—P2
“If you go and take someone’s property you might get caught, then maybe you might get caught or a part of the body is cut, maybe your leg and that will make you end up in a wheelchair. It’s terrible when they do that, but people know they should not be stealing”Bondo group—P8
“Or it is like, maybe laughing at someone who has a particular disability, maybe I broke my arm and you laughed at me. So then in that process, maybe you give birth to a child with the same situation as me, so they may say that God cursed him”Chavakali group—P7
One of Them or One of Us
“[Disability is] The situation where someone can lack an organ or a part of him that make him look different from others”Dandora group—P2
“People who are mad don’t behave like anyone else, you can see very quickly that they are different”Kilifi group—P1
“If this girl has a disabled boyfriend, or maybe this boy who uses a wheelchair, these other girls, not all of them will have the positive side, there are those who will tell you all sorts of things. You see, even if you love him, that will make this girl feel low and in that process this girl will be looking for all sorts of blame games so that they can separate”Nyeri group—P6
“People with disabilities go to school in Kibarani. They have a different school for the disabled there, a place for the deaf… they also have a teacher there who is blind”Kilifi group—P6
“I learnt in Iten primary that behind it [the participant’s school] there is that school of the deaf, so we used to get here to pass time. They are just like us. I do not see any difference with us, it is just that we are….”Iten group—P7
“This guy in my boarding school doesn’t have legs, so he has his own seat there […] Then he doesn’t have fingers to hold a pen. So, he uses one finger and uses it to write. And then he is pretty sly, just the other day he even stole my pen, but when he stole my pen, I also gave him a knock on his head. He is just a human being as I am so I it’s tit for tat, he stole my pen, and I gave him a knock on his head”Mombasa group—P4
Confirming and Defying Stereotypes
“They borrow money, their business is to borrow money”Dandora group—P7
“There are some who use their disability to make some money”Chakavali group—P2
“He [referring to a person with cognitive disabilities] is like a mad person, like he/she is grown but still plays with children like an older person just playing with kids.”Iten group—P1
“Those who are mentally challenged, they might hit you for just looking at them. I was pushed and insulted while excusing them to pass on a muddy road [sic]”—Kilifi group P5
“You know these disabled people, they like mocking people and they are rude, and they do that because they know that no one can beat them up, like no one can spank your butt”—Mombasa group P4
“Yes, we have seen them on T.V, in the news [thre was] a woman writing using her hand. Like she has no fingers. She has legs but can’t walk and she has toes. She knows how to draw, she’s such a big artist”Mombasa group—P2
“There is a person whose leg starts from here until somewhere here, there are no hands but there is something special that he has and when he talks. And he talks to large crowds”—Dandora group—P8
“A doctor who is lame then gets a patient who is lame can advise the patient on how he got there, yet he is [also] lame so he should not take it as a way that will drain his life”Iten group—P5
“Let me say something, where I am from. We have an albino who has an M-Pesa shop and we were told that theirs is a skin condition, so we don’t think of him as a disable person. But we do know they have a disability”Bondo group—P3
Access to Resources
“There are bosses that are disabled, but have their cars there which they drive to work, so there’s no problem there”Kilifi group—P5
“Many people are suffering because they have no cash, they do not have anyone who can help them. But somebody like the president has money, even right now if anything happens to him, he can help himself but not people like us”Dandora group—P2
“If two boys, a deaf and this one [who] is not deaf both have vibed me (courted me), I would accept the one that can hear. But if the deaf boy has money and he is nice I would accept him because he can help take care of me”—Chavakali group P3
“When I was in class 7 I had a disabled desk mate, he was a good friend and was good at Maths. We were classmates and he helped a lot of people who knew him, so we interacted as usual”—Mombasa group P1
3.1.2. Study 2
Traditional and Religious Views of Disability
“We [are] Africans, so whenever your parents give birth to someone who is disabled, they think it is like you are cursed… they think you are [a] cursed one”—Physically disabled male video participant
“While my friend is pushing me, they sympathize… [they say] sorry for what happened, we pray for you so that one day you will walk. But to me, I appreciate how God made me”—Physically disabled male video participant
Lack of Understanding
When I enter into a matatu, people think I’m sick, most of them move away from me”—Hearing impaired female video participant
“I used to fear the disabilities, I’m sorry to say though. I didn’t want to have interactions with them, I didn’t want to get so close, [it] felt like something different to me… I had some fear in me, so I kept my distance”—Participant without disabilities
Lack of Accommodation and Invisibility
“At the workplace… most of the colleagues are [not] hearing [impaired], actually the majority [of them]. They have their own cocoon; they have their own groups… I was alone, no one was able to talk to me because of the issue of sign language”—Hearing impaired, video participant
“There was a time there was an advert for a job, I applied for that job, I was shortlisted, I was called for the interview… I was ushered into the room, so one of the panellists saw my hearing aid, they were like what do we do? There is no SL interpreter would he be able to write?”—Hearing impaired video participant
“When they see a wheelchair, they’ve not even seen me, they’ve not interacted with me… simply because they judged me because I’m a wheelchair user. That is a stigma”—Physically impaired, female video participant
Even those who are grownups are following you, wanting to know…what is this cane for? They try to grab it”—Visually impaired female video participant
3.2. Role of AT in Disability Stigma
3.2.1. Study 1
AT as a Disability Identifier
Moderator: “What is the disability of this person?”
P1 “He has crutches”
Moderator “What about this one? Who drew this?”
P4 “I did it. That one uses a stick to walk because he has only one leg” Kilifi group
AT as an Enabler
“I schooled with him [a young boy with disabilities] when he was that way, and he even had his own chair that was designed for him. So that’s a special chair that was made for him that enabled him to sit on his stomach and he was in boarding school”Mombasa group—P4
“Most of them [people with access to high tech devices] are of high calibre, they are out of reach, whether disabled or not. There are bosses that are disabled but have their cars there which they drive to work, so there’s no problem there”Nyeri group—P5
3.2.2. Study 2
AT as a Beacon for Stigma
“She needs to use a calliper… [she] hasn’t used it for 5 years due to pity people have… When you’re limping, it is not taken as seriously…[there is] more ability to blend in in the community without use of [the]crutch. I know it’s having an adverse effect on her health”—Female OPD consultee with disabilities
“I have a friend who has a prosthetic leg, she many a times avoids walking into the busy Nairobi streets, people stare at her, maybe laugh when they see her use her leg… Many a times [she] avoids…walking out. She keeps to herself, if [there is] something she needs, she’d rather send somebody than go for it herself”—Female OPD consultee with disabilities
AT as an Extension of the Self
I can perceive for example an aeroplane flying over me, motorbikes, cars passing, so when “I’m walking on the road, I am able to perceive these sounds and can move, so I am not hit by a vehicle”—Hearing impaired female video participant
“White cane changed my life… it helps me like how those people who sees, they see with their eyes and it is like my eyes… The white cane helps me to walk along…where there is trees, stones, it helps me”—Visually impaired female video participant
“[Her AT]…has ameliorated the effect of disability…now she is able to interact with all people, those hearing and not hearing…those devices, [they] promote efficiency and performance”—Female video participant without disabilities
Independence and Empowerment
“It helps me to be confident, many times, I segregated myself because I feel insecure. [I am] able to face my friends, able to see my friends”—Visually impaired female video participant
“It’s given me dignity… I’m able to do my daily activity as a human being…I can interact with people socially…”—Physically impaired female video participant
“I am able to enjoy music with the assistive device, I use my earphones, I can dance and enjoy music”—Hearing impaired male video participant
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Barbareschi, G.; Carew, M.T.; Johnson, E.A.; Kopi, N.; Holloway, C. “When They See a Wheelchair, They’ve Not Even Seen Me”—Factors Shaping the Experience of Disability Stigma and Discrimination in Kenya. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 4272. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18084272
Barbareschi G, Carew MT, Johnson EA, Kopi N, Holloway C. “When They See a Wheelchair, They’ve Not Even Seen Me”—Factors Shaping the Experience of Disability Stigma and Discrimination in Kenya. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(8):4272. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18084272
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarbareschi, Giulia, Mark T. Carew, Elizabeth Aderonke Johnson, Norah Kopi, and Catherine Holloway. 2021. "“When They See a Wheelchair, They’ve Not Even Seen Me”—Factors Shaping the Experience of Disability Stigma and Discrimination in Kenya" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 8: 4272. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18084272
APA StyleBarbareschi, G., Carew, M. T., Johnson, E. A., Kopi, N., & Holloway, C. (2021). “When They See a Wheelchair, They’ve Not Even Seen Me”—Factors Shaping the Experience of Disability Stigma and Discrimination in Kenya. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(8), 4272. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18084272